About: Tropical Storm Peter (2003)   Sponge Permalink

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Tropical Storm Peter was a short-lived tropical storm that developed outside of the typical Atlantic hurricane season. Forming from an extratropical storm, Peter was initially a subtropical storm with minimal convection near its center. As it moved towards warmer waters, the system organized, and transitioned into a tropical cyclone on December 9. With the development of an eye feature, Peter approached hurricane status to reach peak winds of 70 mph (110 km/h), though upper level shear and cooler waters quickly weakened the storm. Peter became extratropical on December 11, and was absorbed by a cold front shortly thereafter.

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  • Tropical Storm Peter (2003)
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  • Tropical Storm Peter was a short-lived tropical storm that developed outside of the typical Atlantic hurricane season. Forming from an extratropical storm, Peter was initially a subtropical storm with minimal convection near its center. As it moved towards warmer waters, the system organized, and transitioned into a tropical cyclone on December 9. With the development of an eye feature, Peter approached hurricane status to reach peak winds of 70 mph (110 km/h), though upper level shear and cooler waters quickly weakened the storm. Peter became extratropical on December 11, and was absorbed by a cold front shortly thereafter.
  • Tropical Storm Peter was the sixteenth named storm of the 2003 Atlantic hurricane season. Peter was another rare off-season storm during the 2003 season, forming on December 7 in the far eastern Atlantic Ocean about 835 miles south-southwest of the Azores. Peter started out as a subtropical cyclone, but ultimately reached a peak of 70 mph as a tropical cyclone before dissipating on December 11. Peter was no threat to land. Peter caused no damage and no deaths.
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  • Tropical Storm Peter was a short-lived tropical storm that developed outside of the typical Atlantic hurricane season. Forming from an extratropical storm, Peter was initially a subtropical storm with minimal convection near its center. As it moved towards warmer waters, the system organized, and transitioned into a tropical cyclone on December 9. With the development of an eye feature, Peter approached hurricane status to reach peak winds of 70 mph (110 km/h), though upper level shear and cooler waters quickly weakened the storm. Peter became extratropical on December 11, and was absorbed by a cold front shortly thereafter.
  • Tropical Storm Peter was the sixteenth named storm of the 2003 Atlantic hurricane season. Peter was another rare off-season storm during the 2003 season, forming on December 7 in the far eastern Atlantic Ocean about 835 miles south-southwest of the Azores. Peter started out as a subtropical cyclone, but ultimately reached a peak of 70 mph as a tropical cyclone before dissipating on December 11. Peter was no threat to land. Peter caused no damage and no deaths.
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