1952 Groundhog Day Tropical Storm

1952 Groundhog Day Tropical Storm

Infobox Hurricane
Name=Groundhog Day Storm of 1952
Type=Tropical storm
Year=1952
Basin=Atl
Formed=February 2, 1952
Dissipated=February 5, 1952
1-min winds=40
Pressure=1004
total da

Inflated=
Fatalities=0
Areas=Florida
Hurricane season=1952 Atlantic hurricane season

The Groundhog Day Storm was a February tropical storm, the only February tropical or subtropical cyclone in recorded Atlantic history.

Meteorological history

On February 2, Groundhog Day, a tropical depression formed in the western Caribbean Sea north of the coast of Honduras. It tracked to the north-northwest, hitting near Cancun hours later while slowly strengthening. Likely subtropical in nature, this rare storm moved quickly to the northeast, where it brushed by northern Cuba that night. In the morning of February 3 it passed near Key West, and two hours later it made landfall on the Florida peninsula near Cape Sable.

While still moving rapidly to the northeast, the system passed just west of Miami, Florida in the morning of February 3. There, the National Weather Service stationed in Miami recorded sustained tropical storm force winds for 4 hours, as well as a minimum central pressure of 1004 millibars (29.66 inches of mercury). The storm also produced peak gusts of convert|68|mi/h|km/h|abbr=on, with sustained winds of convert|59|mi/h|km/h|abbr=on for 5 minutes. This shows how large the storm's wind field was, an indicator of possibly being a subtropical cyclone.

After crossing Florida, the storm accelerated to the northeast. Over the western Atlantic, the storm strengthened, likely baroclinically, to a peak of convert|50|mi/h|km/h|abbr=on winds as a tropical cyclone. On February 4, the Groundhog Day Storm became extratropical east of South Carolina, and the extratropical storm brought heavy wind to the coastline. It continued racing to the northeast, and after hitting Cape Cod and eastern Maine on the 5th, the storm lost its identity over New Brunswick.

Impact

While crossing southern Florida, the storm brought 2-4 inches of rain. This unseasonable mixture of strong winds and heavy rain caused some minor crop damage to vegetables across the state.

While off the coast of North Carolina, a 26-man crew freighter was driven aground as the storm passed by it. The ocean caused waves up to convert|35|ft|m high, but all of the crew were saved.

In the northeast United States, the strong winds caused power outages to 15,000 people, with minor tree damage.

Unusual formation

This storm was the only known tropical cyclone to form in the Atlantic in February. As much of an anomaly it is, it fits in historical perspective, as Caribbean Sea water temperatures in winter are in the 70s or even 80s Fahrenheit in some areas. The only inhibitor is the excessive upper level wind shear. If the strong winds were to abate while a disturbance was in the area, this could lead to tropical cyclogenesis.

Because of its unknown structure at the time, it was treated as an unnamed storm in post-analysis. Had it been named operationally, it would have been Tropical Storm Able.

The only other off-season storm in the western Caribbean Sea between December and April is Tropical Storm Odette, which developed in December in 2003. The storm is one of only 32 tropical storms to develop in the off-season [National Hurricane Center. [http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/gifs/table9.gifTropical Cyclones in the North Atlantic Basin By Month.] Retrieved on 2007-04-01.] , and was the earliest a tropical storm has ever hit the United States.

ee also

*List of tropical cyclones

References

External links

* [http://www.usatoday.com/weather/hurricane/history/groundhog-day-storm.htm USA Today Storm Info]
* [http://www.americawestvacations.com/destinations/mexico/cancun.html Cancún Water Temperatures]
* [http://web.archive.org/web/20010813095540/www.atlantichurricaneguide.com/February.html New York Time Reports]


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