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Cat Five Dean Slams Yucatan

August 21, 2007

Hurricane Dean joined a small but devastating group of Category five hurricanes with winds in excess of 160 mph (255 kp/hr) as it slammed into the Yucatan Peninsula near the border of Mexico and Belize.

News reports (BBC, TF1 and others) reported heavy rains, shrieking winds and huge storm surge waves, as the population – locals and tourists alike – huddled in designated shelters to wait out the storm’s passing.

Miami’s National Hurricane Center has now downgraded Dean to a category three hurricane (125 mph/205 km/hr with higher gusts) as it passes over the Yucatan on its way into the Gulf of Mexico.

It could, however, regain some strength as it travels over the warm waters of the Gulf. The NHC said a Hurricane Warning is in effect “along the West Coast of the Yucatan Peninsula and the Gulf Coast of Mexico from south of Progreso southward and westward to Veracruz.”

It is too early to gauge the amount of damage Dean has caused on its path through the Yucatan, or if there have been any fatalities. The resort town of Chetumal lies about 40 miles (65 kms) north-east of where the eye of the storm came ashore, but farther north Cancun and the island of Cozumel were spared the worst of the storm’s fury.

Topics Hurricane Mexico

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Latest Comments

  • August 22, 2007 at 8:10 am
    CLR says:
    Mexico was hit & hit hard by this storm & Dean is nowhere near done. He certainly slowed on his departure from the Yucatan Peninsula, but will regain some strength as he cross... read more
  • August 22, 2007 at 7:48 am
    VMI says:
    This is a prime example of why the Hurricane Forecasting function is a waste of taxpayer monies. I'm not speaking of Hurricane tracking, just forecasting. It doesn't make an... read more
  • August 21, 2007 at 2:34 am
    another guy named Rick says:
    Dean was a Cat5 storm as it came ashore. As it moved across the Yucatan peninsula it lost energy/wind speed and became a Cat3 storm. The question now is when it moves over the... read more

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