Tropical Storm Edouard was the fifth named storm of the 1990 Atlantic hurricane season. Edouard had a non-tropical origin, and was a high latitude storm that formed on August 2 southwest of the Azores. Edouard was never a very tropical system, but because deep convection developed and organized around the center for a time, it was designated a tropical cyclone. Edouard moved slowly and erratically across the northeastern Atlantic Ocean until it became extratropical on August 11. Edouard caused no known damage, and no known fatalities.
Attributes | Values |
---|
rdfs:label
| - Tropical Storm Edouard (1990)
|
rdfs:comment
| - Tropical Storm Edouard was the fifth named storm of the 1990 Atlantic hurricane season. Edouard had a non-tropical origin, and was a high latitude storm that formed on August 2 southwest of the Azores. Edouard was never a very tropical system, but because deep convection developed and organized around the center for a time, it was designated a tropical cyclone. Edouard moved slowly and erratically across the northeastern Atlantic Ocean until it became extratropical on August 11. Edouard caused no known damage, and no known fatalities.
- Tropical Storm Edouard was unusual for its extreme northeasterly located in the Atlantic Ocean. The sixth tropical cyclone and fifth named storm of the 1990 Atlantic hurricane season, Edouard developed on August 2 from non-tropical mid-latitude cyclone, although initially forming as a subtropical depression. subtropical storm, then gradually acquiring tropical characteristics in the vicinity of the Azores. Remaining a subtropical cyclone for four days, the system transitioned into a tropical depression on August 6, finally strengthening into Tropical Storm Edouard after duration for nearly a week. Edouard managed to peak as a minimal tropical storm while again crossing through the Azores, before subsequently weakening. Tropical Storm Edouard quickly lost all tropical characteristics, and t
|
dcterms:subject
| |
dbkwik:hurricanes/...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
abstract
| - Tropical Storm Edouard was unusual for its extreme northeasterly located in the Atlantic Ocean. The sixth tropical cyclone and fifth named storm of the 1990 Atlantic hurricane season, Edouard developed on August 2 from non-tropical mid-latitude cyclone, although initially forming as a subtropical depression. subtropical storm, then gradually acquiring tropical characteristics in the vicinity of the Azores. Remaining a subtropical cyclone for four days, the system transitioned into a tropical depression on August 6, finally strengthening into Tropical Storm Edouard after duration for nearly a week. Edouard managed to peak as a minimal tropical storm while again crossing through the Azores, before subsequently weakening. Tropical Storm Edouard quickly lost all tropical characteristics, and transitioned into a weak extratropical storm north of the Azores. Tropical Storm Edouard was named in the extreme northeast Atlantic Ocean, but no records were broken, however, it is only slightly south Tropical Storm Grace in 2009, and Tropical Storm Alberto in 1988. Tropical Storm Edouard only resulted in light affects to the Azores, with no reports of damage or fatalities.
- Tropical Storm Edouard was the fifth named storm of the 1990 Atlantic hurricane season. Edouard had a non-tropical origin, and was a high latitude storm that formed on August 2 southwest of the Azores. Edouard was never a very tropical system, but because deep convection developed and organized around the center for a time, it was designated a tropical cyclone. Edouard moved slowly and erratically across the northeastern Atlantic Ocean until it became extratropical on August 11. Edouard caused no known damage, and no known fatalities.
|