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Ivan AND CAMILLE!!! FREAKY
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Ivan AND CAMILLE!!! FREAKY
look simular (atleast just in picture and not in strength!)
http://myweb.cableone.net/nolasue/camilleivan.gif
http://myweb.cableone.net/nolasue/camilleivan.gif
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PurdueWx80
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NorthGaWeather
- vbhoutex
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Re: Not to be Ugly but .. .
TideFreak wrote:Camille was never in the Carribean
WRONG!!! Camille came across the West end of Cuba as a Hurricane. If that isn't the Caribbean I don't know what it is.
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TideFreak
Well not that area
Sry Camille was in the Carribean briefly, but it was the Northwest Carribean
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NorthGaWeather
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Anonymous
Camille was not a Cape Verde storm. And I really do not see any similarity in shape, or cloud pattern between the two, especially when you look at the respective eyes.
Take the time and read some history about Camille, on the internet. There are many sites/articles of good reading.
There hasn't been anything close to Camille, as far as U.S. landfalling hurricanes go, since she devestated the Mississippi Gulf Coast.
If a Camille like storm 190mph winds (220+/mph wind gusts) to hit the U.S., damages would be in the 10's of billions.
Take the time and read some history about Camille, on the internet. There are many sites/articles of good reading.
There hasn't been anything close to Camille, as far as U.S. landfalling hurricanes go, since she devestated the Mississippi Gulf Coast.
If a Camille like storm 190mph winds (220+/mph wind gusts) to hit the U.S., damages would be in the 10's of billions.
Last edited by Anonymous on Tue Sep 07, 2004 4:39 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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NorthGaWeather
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quickychick
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NorthGaWeather
From a report on Camille
"With satellite imagery, forecasters identified a typical tropical wave off the coast of Africa on August 5, 1969. On August 9, the system was about 480 miles east of the Caribbean's leeward islands. Five days later, the pilot of a Navy reconnaissance plane observed a central pressure of 29.50 inches of mercury and surface winds of 55 mph (USACE 1970). Forecasters classified Camille as a tropical storm located 60 miles west of Grand Cayman Island, 480 miles south of Miami"
"With satellite imagery, forecasters identified a typical tropical wave off the coast of Africa on August 5, 1969. On August 9, the system was about 480 miles east of the Caribbean's leeward islands. Five days later, the pilot of a Navy reconnaissance plane observed a central pressure of 29.50 inches of mercury and surface winds of 55 mph (USACE 1970). Forecasters classified Camille as a tropical storm located 60 miles west of Grand Cayman Island, 480 miles south of Miami"
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NorthGaWeather wrote:Camille was a Cape Verde(African) wave. Please find the facts before claiming someone else is wrong.
Caribbean
http://weather.unisys.com/hurricane/atl ... /track.gif
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Anonymous
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NorthGaWeather
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