At least six major storms appear from the Atlantic Ocean
In the rainy season 2007, at least six major storms occurred in the Atlantic region, including three super typhoons, according to US meteorologists.
Meteorological expert Phil Klotzbach, who presided over a study of the rainy season (from early June to the end of November), judged that at the end of the season, storms would become more aggressive.
In the first three months of the rainy season, there are two storms reaching the maximum level (level 5/5) when entering the mainland. This is the first time there have been two consecutive Category 5 storms (Typhoon Dean and Felix). And in September, five tropical storms could form in the Atlantic, in which four storms could turn into big storms. Five other storms will form in October and November, in which a super typhoon.
Felix stormed through Central America, killing at least four people, seriously damaging the Caribbean port city of Puerto Cabezas on Nicaragua. And despite lowering the intensity to low pressure, Felix risked landslides in Honduras and Guatemala after submerging many places in these countries.
La Ceiba, Honduras, sank into the sea when Hurricane Felix hit Central America (photo: TTO)
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