No
doubt this is just weather!
'Don't mention the war'
----Basil Fawlty
Arthur
Brings Wind, Rain, Flooding to NC Coast
It
took almost a month of the 2014 hurricane season for the first storm
to form, but once it did, Arthur strengthened quickly and set its
sights on the North Carolina coast. Here is our event summary of
Hurricane Arthur.
7
July, 2014
Arthur's
Development
As
we mentioned in our June
climate summary,
the system that eventually became Arthur began its life as a stalled
frontal boundary off the coast of the Southeast U.S. After sitting
nearly stationary for several days over the warm Gulf Stream waters,
the system was designated Tropical
Depression 1 on
June 30th, then strengthened into Tropical
Storm Arthur the
next day.
Arthur
wasn't without its share of growing pains, though. Dry
air to the north and
northwesterly wind shear initially slowed development, but
environmental conditions gradually became more favorable. By the
morning of July 3rd, Arthur reached hurricane
strength.
After weathering some additional dry air entrainment, it developed an
impressive eye and reached category
2 strength by
9 pm with maximum sustained winds of 100 mph.
Landfall
and Impacts
Around
11:15 pm on July 3rd, Arthur made landfall as a category-2 storm near
Beaufort, NC,
at nearly the same location as Hurricane
Irenedid
in 2011. Arthur's track over the Pamlico Sound put the Outer Banks in
the storm's right
front quadrant.
In that region to the right of the eye, the combination of the
storm's forward motion and its counterclockwise circulation gives the
strongest winds and storm surge.
That
soundside surge caused flooding
along the Outer Banks and overwash
and damage to
parts of NC Highway 12. Unlike Irene, Arthur did not open any new
inlets along the barrier islands, so Highway 12 was re-opened to
residents on July 5th. Elsewhere along the coast, Arthur's departure
gave way to sunny skies and a beautiful Independence Day weekend -- a
remarkable weather turnaround in less than 24 hours.
Arthur
dumped several inches of rain on eastern North Carolina as it moved
up the coast. Weather stations near Wilmington and Southport reported
more than 3 inches of rain, and our ECONet station in Kinston
reported 4.3 inches during the storm. Arthur also brought some
impressive wind gusts along the coast. An automated station at Cape
Lookout reported a 101 mph gust, along with a pressure
drop to 978.2 mb as
the eye moved over.
Total precipitation (left, in inches) and maximum wind gusts (right, in mph) across eastern North Carolina from July 3rd and 4th. Click each map for a larger version.
Arthur's
Place in the History Books
Although
this year's first tropical storm formed a little later than we're
used to, a landfalling hurricane this early in the season is somewhat
rare. Arthur became the earliest-known landfalling storm in North
Carolina, coming onshore a week earlier than first
hurricane of the 1901 season,
which hit the northern Outer Banks as a category-1 storm on July
11th, and Hurricane
Bertha in 1996,
which hit the southern coast as a cat-2 on July 12th. Arthur was also
about 45 minutes shy of being the first-known landfalling hurricane
on July 4th.
The
slow start to this hurricane season was not unexpected. As we
discussed in our recent summer
outlook,
the building El NiƱo event in the Pacific and cooler-than-normal sea
surface temperatures across the Atlantic meant most pre-season
forecasts called for below-average tropical activity in the Atlantic
this year. However, we cautioned -- as did many of the forecasts --
that an overall inactive season can still be an impactful one.
While
Arthur caused no reported serious injuries or fatalities and the
damage does not appear to be severe, it does serve as a good warning
that even in seasons expected to be inactive in the tropics, strong
landfalling storms can still happen
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