Tropical Storm and Hurricane Jerry Page
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September 24, 2007- Jerry Dissipates As It Races Northeastward... 
Satellite data indicate that the circulation of Jerry has dissipated within a large extratropical low. 
At 1100 PM AST the remnants of Jerry were located near latitude 44.5 north longitude 37.5 west or about 705 miles northwest of the Azores.   The remnants of jerry are moving toward the northeast near 40 mph and this motion should continue overnight.   As jerry accelerated and dissipated this evening, maximum sustained winds increased to near 45 mph, with higher gusts.   Tropical storm force winds extend outward up to 105 miles from the center.   Estimated minimum central pressure is 1000 mb...29.53 inches.   
  


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 2007 -- Hurricane -- Tropical Storm Jerry Diary

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http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm54e930a1.htm
 
The following documents have been recently UPDATED:
Effects of Hurricane Katrina on Children's Blood Lead Levels
http://www.bt.cdc.gov/disasters/hurricanes/katrina/leadkatrina.asp

Translations for the following documents are now available:
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DURING A HURRICANE WATCH
(A Hurricane Watch is issued when there is a threat of hurricane conditions within 24-36 hours.)
1. Listen to a battery-operated radio or television for hurricane progress reports.
2. Check emergency supply kit.
3. Fuel car.
4. Bring in outdoor objects such as lawn furniture, toys, and garden tools and anchor objects that cannot be brought inside.
5. Secure buildings by closing and boarding up windows. Remove outside antennas.
6. Turn refrigerator and freezer to coldest settings. Open only when absolutely necessary and close quickly.
7. Store drinking water in clean bathtubs, jugs, bottles, and cooking utensils.
8. Store valuables and personal papers in a waterproof container on the highest level of your home. 9. Review evacuation plan.
10. Moor boat securely or move it to a designated safe place. Use rope or chain to secure boat to trailer. Use tiedowns to anchor trailer to the ground or house.
Source: floridadisaster.org/      Florida's Division of Emergency Management
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History of Storms Named Jerry -- There have been two Tropical Storm Jerry in 1995 and 2001 and one Hurricane Jerry in 1989.  The Hurricane Jerry of mid October 1989 hit as a hurricane in northeast Texas near the border of Louisiana as a class one huricane. In 1995 Tropical Storm Jerry formed just outside the southcentral coast of Florida before heading across Florida toward Tallahassee and then turning to the Carolinas, where six people died as a result of flash flooding. In 2001 Tropical Storm Jerry crossed the Lesser Antilles before dieing out at sea.  1989- Tracking information

Year 2007 Hurricane Jerry Diary


September 24, 2007-  Jerry Expected To Dissipate Later Tonight... 
At 500 PM AST the center of Tropical Depression Jerry was located near latitude 41.8 north...longitude 42.7 west or about 870 miles west-northwest of the Azores.   The depression is moving toward the northeast near 23 mph and an additional increase in forward speed is expected tonight.   Maximum sustained winds are near 35 mph with higher gusts.  Little change in strength is anticipated today and tonight, and jerry is forecast to be absorbed by a larger non-tropical low pressure system by Tuesday morning.   Estimated minimum central pressure is 1003 mb...29.62 inches. 

September 24, 2007-  Jerry Weakens To A Depression As It Heads For Cooler Waters... 
At 1100 AM AST the center of Tropical Depression Jerry was located near latitude 39.5 north...longitude 44.5 west or about 945 miles west-northwest of the Azores.   The depression is moving toward the northeast near 13 mph an increase in forward speed is expected today and tonight.   Maximum sustained winds are near 35 mph, with higher gusts.  Little change in strength is anticipated today and tonight, and jerry is forecast to be absorbed by a larger non-tropical low pressure system by Tuesday morning.  Estimated minimum central pressure is 1004 mb...29.65 inches. 

September 24, 2007-  Jerry accelerating toward cooler waters...
At 500 AM AST the center of Tropical Storm Jerry was located near latitude 38.6 north...longitude 45.4 west or about 995 miles west of the Azores.   Jerry is moving toward the north-northeast near 15 mph.  A turn toward the northeast with an increase in forward speed is expected today.  On this track...Jerry will remain far from land and pass in between the Azores and southeastern Canada today.   Maximum sustained winds are near 40 mph, with higher gusts.  Little change in strength is anticipated today...and jerry is forecast to be absorbed by a larger non-tropical low pressure system by Tuesday morning.   Tropical storm force winds extend outward up to 105 miles from the center.   Estimated minimum central pressure is 1004 mb...29.65 inches. 

September 23, 2007-  Jerry becomes a tropical storm...  
At 1100 PM AST the center of Tropical Storm Jerry was located near latitude 37.4 north...longitude 46.1 west or about 1045 miles west of the Azores.   Jerry is moving toward the north near 8 mph and a northeastward motion with an increase in forward speed is expected during the next 24 hours.    Maximum sustained winds are near 40 mph, with higher gusts.  Little change in strength is forecast during the next 24 hours.    Tropical storm force winds extend outward up to 105 miles from the center.   Estimated minimum central pressure is  29.65 inches.
 

September 23, 2007 -- Jerry Beginning To Take On Tropical Characteristics... 
At 500 PM AST the center of subtropical storm jerry was located near latitude 36.8 north...longitude 46.3 west or about 1060 miles west of the Azores.   The storm is moving toward the north near 6 mph and a north-northeastward motion with an increase in forward speed is expected during the next 24 hours.  On this track the storm will be moving over the open waters of the north central Atlantic, well to the west of the Azores.   Maximum sustained winds are near 40 mph, with higher gusts.  Some strengthening is forecast during the next 24 hours, and Jerry is likely to acquire tropical characteristics later tonight.   Winds of 40 mph extend outward up to 105 miles  from the center.   Estimated minimum central pressure is 1004 mb...29.65 inches.

 September 23, 2007 -- Subtropical Depression Strengthens To A Subtropical Storm...No Threat To Land... 
At 1100 AM AST the center of subtropical storm jerry was located near latitude 36.0 north...longitude 46.3 west or about 1070 miles west of the Azores.   The storm is nearly stationary, but a slow north-northeastward motion is expected to begin later today with an increase in forward speed by tonight or early on Monday.  On this track the storm will be moving over the open waters of the north central Atlantic, well to the west of the Azores.   Maximum sustained winds are near 40 mph, with higher gusts.  Some strengthening is forecast during the next 24 hours, and Jerry is likely to acquire tropical characteristics later today.   Winds of 40 mph extend outward up to 105 miles from the center.   Estimated minimum central pressure is 1004 mb...29.65 inches.  

September 23, 2007 -- Subtropical Depression Forms Far From Land In The North Central Atlantic...  

At 500 AM AST the center of subtropical depression eleven was located near latitude 36.2 north...longitude 46.1 west or about 1060 miles west of the Azores.   The depression is currently stationary, but is expected to begin a slow motion toward the north later today, with an increase in forward speed tonight.  On this track the depression will be moving over the open waters of the north central Atlantic, well to the west of the Azores.   Maximum sustained winds are near 35 mph, with higher gusts.  Some strengthening is forecast during the next 24 hours as the depression gains more tropical characteristics, and it could become a tropical storm later today or tonight.   Estimated minimum central pressure is 1007 mb...29.74 inches.  
TROPICAL DEPRESSION TEN formed before Jerry and for a while it was believed it would be named Jerry....
September 21, 2007 --  Short-Lived Depression Weakens As It Moves Inland...   
At 1000 PM CDT the center of Tropical Depression Ten was located inland near latitude 30.6 north - longitude 87.1 west or about 10 miles northeast of Pensacola Florida and about 10 miles northeast of Pensacola Florida.  The depression is moving toward the northwest near 9 mph. A gradual turn to the west is expected on Saturday. On this track the depression will continue to move over land.  Maximum sustained winds have decreased to near 30 mph, with higher gusts.  The depression is expected to become a remnant low on Saturday.  Estimated minimum central pressure is 1005 mb...29.68 inches.  Rainfall accumulations of 2 to 4 inches, with isolated maximum amounts of 6 inches, can be expected in association with the depression.  Isolated tornadoes are possible over southwestern Georgia, the Florida Panhandle, and southern Alabama through Saturday morning.  This is the last public advisory issued by the national hurricane center on this system. Future information on this system can be found in public advisories issued by the Hydrometeorological Prediction Center, under awips header tcpat5 and wmo header wtnt35 kwnh, beginning at 400 AM CDT.

 
Tropical Depression Coming Onshore...Did Not Strengthen...  

September 21, 2007 -- At 700 PM CDT, the tropical storm warning for the gulf coast has been discontinued.  For storm information specific to your area, including possible inland watches and warnings...please monitor products issued by your local weather office.  At 700 PM CDT, the center of Tropical Depression Ten was almost onshore near latitude 30.4 north - longitude 86.7 west, near Fort Walton Beach Florida.  The depression is moving toward the northwest near 9 mph.  This motion is expected to continue tonight, bringing the center of the depression farther inland.  Radar and surface observations indicate that the depression has not strengthened and maximum sustained winds remain near 35 mph in a few squalls, with higher gusts.  A gradual weakening should begin tonight after the center moves farther inland.  The latest minimum central pressure reported by an air force reserve unit reconnaissance aircraft was 1005 mb...29.68 inches.  Rainfall accumulations of 2 to 4 inches, with isolated maximum amounts of 6 inches, can be expected in association with the depression.  Isolated tornadoes are possible over southwestern Georgia...the Florida Panhandle...and southeastern Alabama through tonight.  Coastal storm surge flooding of 1 to 2 feet above normal tide levels can be expected in areas of onshore flow tonight.  
September 21, 2007 - Depression Becomes Tropical...  
Satellite imagery indicates that the subtropical depression has acquired enough tropical characteristics to be considered a tropical depression.  A tropical storm warning remains in effect from Apalachicola Florida westward to the mouth of the Mississippi River...including New Orleans and Lake Pontchartrain. A tropical storm warning means that tropical storm conditions are expected within the warning area within the next 24 hours.  For storm information specific to your area, including possible inland watches and warnings, please monitor products issued by your local weather office.  

At 100 PM CDT the center of Tropical Depression Ten was located near latitude 29.7 north...longitude 85.9 west or about 50 miles southwest of Apalachicola Florida and about 155 miles east-southeast of Mobile Alabama.  The depression is moving toward the northwest near 11 mph. A turn to the west-northwest is expected during the next 24 hours. On the forecast track,the center of the depression will be moving nearly parallel to the coastline within the warning area today and tonight.  Maximum sustained winds are near 35 mph, with higher gusts.  The depression is expected to become a tropical storm later today or tomorrow.  The minimum central pressure reported by a reconnaissance aircraft was 1006 mb...29.71 inches.  Rainfall accumulations of 2 to 4 inches, with isolated maximum amounts of 6 inches, can be expected in association with the depression.  Isolated tornadoes are possible over southwestern Georgia, the Florida Panhandle, and southeastern Alabama through tonight.  Coastal storm surge flooding of 1 to 2 feet above normal tide levels can be expected in areas of onshore flow. 

September 21, 2007 -- Subtropical Depression Forms In The Northeastern Gulf Of Mexico... 
At 10 AM CDT a tropical storm warning is in effect from Apalachicola Florida westward to the mouth of the Mississippi River, including New Orleans and Lake Pontchartrain.  A tropical storm warning means that tropical storm conditions are expected within the warning area within the next 24 hours.  For storm information specific to your area, including possible inland watches and warnings, please monitor products issued by your local weather office. 
At 1000 AM CDT the poorly-defined center of Subtropical Depression Ten was located near latitude 29.2 north...longitude 85.5 west or about 45 miles southwest of Apalachicola Florida and about 185 miles east-southeast of Mobile Alabama.  The depression is moving toward the northwest near 8 mph.  A turn to the west-northwest is expected during the next 24 hours.  On the forecast track...the center of the depression will be moving nearly parallel to the coastline within the warning area today and tonight.  Maximum sustained winds are near 35 mph, with higher gusts.  Some strengthening is forecast during the next 24 hours...and the depression could become a subtropical or tropical storm later today.  The minimum central pressure reported by a reconnaissance aircraft was 1004 mb...29.65 inches.  Rainfall accumulations of 2 to 4 inches, with isolated maximum amounts of 6 inches, can be expected in association with the depression.  Isolated tornadoes are possible over southwestern Georgia, the Florida Panhandle, and southeastern Alabama through tonight.  Coastal storm surge flooding of 1 to 2 feet above normal tide levels can be expected in areas of onshore flow.

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Year 2007 Hurricane Names 
Andrea -- Barry -- Chantal -- Dean -- Erin -- Felix -- Gabrielle -- Humberto -- Ingrid -- Jerry -- Karen -- Lorenzo -- Melissa -- Noel -- Olga -- Pablo -- Rebekah -- Sebastien -- Tanya -- Van -- Wendy