- Hurricane Liza (1976)
Infobox Hurricane
Name=Hurricane Liza
Basin=EPac
Type=hurricane
Image location=Hurricane Liza (1976).jpg
September 30 .
Formed=September 25 ,1976
Dissipated=October 2 ,1976
1-min winds=120
Pressurepre=≤
Pressure=948
Fatalities=600-950 total
Areas=NorthernMexico
Hurricane season=1976 Pacific hurricane season Hurricane Liza of the
1976 Pacific hurricane season was a devastatingtropical cyclone that killed over 600 people in northernMexico .Meteorological history
A tropical depression formed on
September 25 and headed west. It turned to the north and strengthened into a tropical storm. Moving at a glacial pace, Liza slowly strengthened into a hurricane onSeptember 28 . Its speed of motion and its rate of intensification increased, and Liza became a major hurricane onSeptember 29 and a Category 4 late that day. Its minimum measured central pressure was 948millibars .Liza veered slightly to the west and brushed past the southern tip of the
Baja California Peninsula . The hurricane headed north into theGulf of California . It made landfall as a major hurricane nearGuaymas and tore into the states ofSonora andSinaloa . Liza dissipated in the mountains of Northern Mexico early onOctober 2 .By being one of seven Pacific hurricanes to make landfall as a Category 4 or stronger, Liza is also one of the strongest landfalls by a Pacific hurricane.
Impact
Liza brought heavy rains. Near
La Paz, Baja California Sur , rains causedflash flood ing. TheEl Cajoncito Creek on the outskirts of the city grew into a raging torrent. Waters burst a dike. A five-foot wall of water raged through a poor section of the city, washing away and burying in mud over 600 people. Around 350 other people were reported missing. The dam had been described as "poorly built and a permanent menace".ref|NewsDictionaryThe flood left a deep layer of mud. The large number of dead resulted in some of them being burned to prevent disease.ref|NYTimesHurricaneDead The Mexican government eventually launched an investigation into the dam failure.ref|NYTimesInvestigation
In the states of
Sinaloa andSonora , Liza winds peeled of roofs while its storm surge washed ashore. Numerous crops were destroyed. The total cost of damage in Baja California Sur was around 5 million dollars, and unknown elsewhere.Lack of retirement
For unknown reasons, Liza's name was not retired. However, 1976 was the last time that this name was used because modern naming of tropical cyclones began in 1978.
ee also
*
List of tropical cyclones
*Other tropical cyclones named LizaReferences
# Clifford, Mary E. News Dictionary 1976. Facts On File. 1977. ISBN 0-87196-103-2
# [http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/nytimes/355473642.html?did=355473642&FMT=ABS&FMTS=AI&date=Oct+3%2C+1976&author=&pub=New+York+Times++(1857-Current+file)&desc=Mexicans+Burying+Hurricane+Dead Mexicans Burying Hurricane Dead] New York Times. October 3, 1976.
# [http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/nytimes/75727335.html?did=75727335&FMT=CITE&FMTS=AI&date=Oct+7%2C+1976&author=&pub=New+York+Times++(1857-Current+file)&desc=Mexico+to+Study+Dike%27s+Rupture Mexico to Study Dike's Rupture] New York Times. October 7, 1976External links
* [http://www.weather.unisys.com/hurricane/e_pacific/1976/LIZA/track.gifStorm Path]
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