Post by Admin on Sept 19, 2017 15:58:09 GMT -4
Just be safe wherever you are.
Hurricane Maria pummeled the tiny Caribbean island of Dominica overnight with sustained winds of more than 150 mph, ripping the roof off the residence of Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit and causing "widespread devastation."
The storm, which has been fluctuating between a Category 4 and Category 5, was taking aim at several more islands including Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Here is what we know now:
How strong is Hurricane Maria?
The National Hurricane Center said Tuesday that top sustained winds reached 160 mph — making it a major, Category 5 storm.
Where is Hurricane Maria?
The center of the storm rolled off Dominica early Tuesday. As of 2 p.m., it was 110 miles southeast of St. Croix and moving toward the west-northwest at 10 mph.
How much damage did it do in Dominica?
It is too early to determine the full scope of the damage. Skerrit said initial reports suggest "widespread devastation." He said "we have lost all what money can buy and replace" and said he feared landslides likely triggered by persistent rains may have resulted in deaths.
Will Maria slam into the U.S. East Coast?
It is still too early to determine with a certainty whether the storm will bring havoc to the U.S. East Coast — and any threat would not be until early next week. AccuWeather senior meteorologist Rob Miller said, however, that the storm will most likely take a course similar to Hurricane Jose, which swept north and had only an indirect impact on the U.S. coastline. Florida, severely battered by Hurricane Irma, likely will be spared Maria's wrath, Miller said.
Where is Maria going next?
Hurricane warnings were posted for the U.S. and British Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Guadeloupe, St. Kitts, Nevis, Montserrat and a portion of the Dominican Republic. Puerto Rico was expected to take a direct hit Wednesday, and Gov. Ricardo Rosselló said the government has prepared hundreds of shelters capable of housing more than 100,000 evacuees if necessary. A tropical storm warning was issued for Martinique, Antigua and Barbuda, Saba, St. Eustatius, St. Maarten, St. Lucia and Anguilla.
What will Maria bring to those islands?
Forecasters said the storm was driving a surge that could raise water levels by up to 9 feet near the storm’s center and could dump 15 inches of rain or more on the islands.
What looms after Maria?
A large area of high pressure centered near Bermuda is forecast to continue pumping warm, humid air northward from the Gulf of Mexico and the western Atlantic, AccuWeather said. "When we get a pattern such as this, we usually have two to three named storms in October and can have one in November or December," AccuWeather hurricane expert Dan Kottlowski.