. Earth Science News .
Florida Gets First Hurricane Warning Of 2006 Season

Tropical Storm Alberto hovers over the Gulf of Mexico. US authorities issued a hurricane warning 12 June for Florida as the first major storm of the Atlantic season gathered strength while bearing down on the US Gulf of Mexico coastline. Cuban authorities have already evacuated 28,000 people as Tropical Storm Alberto swept past the island packing winds of almost 70 miles (115 kilometers) an hour, heading north toward the United States. Photo courtesy of AFP.
by Staff Writers
Miami (AFP) Jun 13, 2006
US authorities issued a hurricane warning Monday for Florida as the first major storm of the Atlantic season gathered strength while bearing down on the US Gulf of Mexico coastline.

In Tampa, which is affected by the warning, a small plane slammed into a house, killing one person, but authorities said it was unclear whether the severe weather already affecting the area played a role in the crash.

With the region still traumatised by 2005 hurricanes Katrina, Rita, Dennis and Wilma, the National Hurricane Center predicted Alberto could turn into a hurricane and hit Florida's Gulf coast on Tuesday.

"Preparations to protect life and property should be rushed to completion," said NHC forecaster Richard Pasch.

Local authorities ordered an evacuation of residents in threatened low-lying coastal areas of Levy County.

"Alberto has the potential to become a hurricane within the next 24 hours," said the US National Hurricane Center, adding that it could spawn tornadoes in Florida.

The hurricane warning was issued for the Gulf of Mexico coast from Florida's Longboat Key to the Ochlockonee river.

Cuban authorities earlier evacuated 28,000 people as the storm swept past the island packing winds of almost 70 miles (115 kilometers) an hour.

Eight people were injured, four homes were destroyed and 48 others damaged by a tornado at Nueva Paz, south of Havana, which was whipped up by Alberto, television reports said.

Air and sea transport to the Isle of Youth, south of Havana, was cut off by the storm, Cuban television reported. Nine people have been killed in bad weather in Cuba in the past two weeks.

Alberto is the first storm since last year's record-smashing season of 28 storms, 15 of which became hurricanes.

Several of the hurricanes blasted across Florida, including the season's worst, Katrina, which left 1,300 people dead and tens of thousands homeless along the Louisiana and Mississippi Gulf Coast.

The city of New Orleans is still struggling to recover and engineers have warned its levees may not withstand another Katrina-style battering.

The hurricane season officially started on June 1 and lasts until November 30.

US weather experts are forecasting between eight to 10 hurricanes -- six of them major -- this year.

Source: Agence France-Presse

Related Links
Read more about Disaster Management systems

Activity At Merapi Slows
Mount Merapi, Indonesia (AFP) Jun 13, 2006
Indonesia's Mount Merapi has slowed its threatening activity, spewing less lava and fewer clouds of gas and ash but a top alert on the volcano is being maintained, scientists said Monday.







  • Indonesia To Ask Creditors For Yogya Quake Loans
  • Emergency Communications Service For 2006 Hurricane Season
  • Sinking Levees
  • Future Hurricane Disasters May Become More Costly

  • Annan Warns Of Poverty And Conflict As Deserts Expand
  • Researcher Offers Insights On Development Of Arid Semiarid Landscapes
  • Global Greenhouse Cooked Up A Hot Stew Of Life
  • Climate change could fuel fiercer hurricane cycles: researchers

  • Land Use Mapped In Philippines
  • CALIPSO All Set To Collect Most Detailed Atmospheric Data Yet
  • NASA Detector Sees Infrared Light In Colors
  • EarthData Wins 16 Million Contract To Map Papua New Guinea

  • China Moves Ahead With Ambitious Plan For More Yangtze River Hydro Power
  • Japan To Give Asia Coal Liquefaction Technology
  • Policy Makers Draw Up List Of 'Top 100' Ecological Questions
  • Producing Bio-Ethanol From Agricultural Waste A Step Closer

  • US Approves Wild Bird Avian Flu Surveillance Network
  • Large-Scale Genomics Project Will Hunt Genes Behind Common Childhood Diseases
  • H5N1 Signature May Help Detection
  • Plant Diseases Threaten Chocolate Production Worldwide

  • Gazelles Shrink Liver And Heart To Reduce Oxygen Consumption During Drought
  • Researchers Take the Pulse of a Gene in Living Cells
  • Germany Establishes First Biodiversity Exploratories
  • Climate Change Driving Evolution Of Animal Species

  • Sandia Tool Speeds Up Environmental Cleanup, Reopening Of Contaminated Facilities
  • India Court Allows Toxic Ship Into Territorial Waters
  • Decades Of Acid Rain Is Causing Loss Of Valuable Northeast Sugar Maples
  • Air pollution rife in India's villages: report

  • Evidence Human Activities Have Shaped Large-Scale Ecological Patterns
  • Ancient Human Fossils Find Modern Virtual Home
  • Ancient DNA Sequence Allows New Look At Neandertals Diversity
  • Chaco Canyon: A Place Of Kings And Palaces

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement