blinkx
  • hurricane Kenna on my vacation

  • 00:11:40
  • Daily Motion
    • Browse

hurricane Kenna on my vacation

Hurricane Kenna was the third-most intense Pacific hurricane to strike the west coast of Mexico in recorded history.[1] Kenna was the sixteenth tropical depression, thirteenth tropical storm, seventh hurricane, sixth major hurricane, and third Category 5 hurricane of the 2002 Pacific hurricane season. After forming on October 22 to the south of Mexico from a tropical wave, forecasters consistently predicted the storm to strengthen much less than it actually did. Moving into an area of favorable upper – level conditions and warm sea surface temperatures, Kenna quickly strengthened to reach peak winds of 165 mph (265 km/h) on October 25 while located about 255 mi (410 km) southwest of Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco. Weakening as it turned to the northeast, the hurricane struck near San Blas, Nayarit, with winds of 140 mph (225 km/h) before dissipating on October 26 over the Sierra Madre Occidental mountains

Daily Motion | January 11, 2008Watch more videos from Daily Motion

Tags:. .turned. .san. .moving. .season. .area











Actually   Area   Blas   Category   Coast   Conditions   Consistently   Depression   Dissipating   Favorable   Flood   Forecasters   Forming   History   Hurricane   Intense   Jalisco   Kenna   Km   Less   Level   Located   Madre   Major   Mexico   Mi   Mountains   Moving   Mph   Nayarit   Near   Northeast   Occidental   October   Pacific   Peak   Predicted   Puerto   Quickly   Reach   San   Sea   Season   Seventh   Sierra   Sixteenth   Sixth   South   Southwest   Storm   Strengthened   Strike   Struck   Surface   Temperatures   Third   Thirteenth   Tropical   Turned   Upper   Vacation   Vallarta   Warm   Wave   Weakening   West   Winds