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This article originally provided by
Yahoo
December 31, 2005
Tropical Storm Zeta Forms in Atlantic
By ADRIAN SAINZ, Associated Press Writer
In a surprising but nonthreatening curtain call to the
Atlantic's busiest-ever hurricane season, Tropical Storm
Zeta formed in the open ocean Friday, trying a record for
the latest-developing named storm.
Although the National Hurricane Center said Zeta wasn't
forecast to become a hurricane or threaten land, Zeta's
development was significant because it came a month after
the official Nov. 30 end to the unprecedented season.
The season brought a record 14 hurricanes, including
Hurricane Katrina, which devastated Louisiana and
Mississippi in August, killing more than 1,300 people in the
most costly disaster in U.S. history. Forecasters exhausted
their list of 21 proper names and began using the Greek
alphabet to name storms for the first time.
Zeta — the 27th named storm of the season and the sixth
letter of the Greek alphabet — was located about 1,065 miles
southwest of the Azores, the National Hurricane Center
reported at 4 p.m. EST Friday. Zeta had maximum sustained
winds of 50 mph and was moving northwest near 7 mph.
Since record keeping began in 1851, only one other named
storm has formed as late as Zeta, said Greg Romano, a
National Weather Service spokesman. Tropical Storm Alice
developed Dec. 30, 1954, and later became a hurricane before
dissipating Jan. 5. Tropical storms develop when their winds
exceed 39 mph, and hurricanes form when their winds exceed
74 mph.
Earlier this month, Hurricane Epsilon became only the
fifth hurricane to form in December in 154 years of record
keeping — though Romano said some storms could have fallen
through the cracks before technology such as satellites was
available to help find and track tropical systems.
Forecasters have said that hurricane seasons are going to
be more active than usual for at least another decade.
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