Very interesting.... I could point out a long interval of HAARP activity in the weeks leading up to this...
Ana develops into full tropical storm
From the National Desk
Published 4/22/2003 1:21 PM
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MIAMI, April 22 (UPI) -- Subtropical storm Ana developed into a full-blown tropical storm with 50 mph winds Tuesday, but it was located in the open
Atlantic and no threat to land.
Little change in strength was expected until mid-day Wednesday, said forecaster Miles Lawrence of the National Hurricane Center.
Ana is the first tropical storm reported in April since record keeping began. It had been the second subtropical storm. The upgrade to tropical storm
was caused by a warming core inside the system that made it more compact and changed some characteristics of the circulation.
At 11 a.m., the center of tropical storm Ana was located near latitude 29.8 north, longitude 57.5 west or about 460 miles east-southeast of Bermuda.
Ana was moving east at 16 mph, and that track is expected to continue until Wednesday. Little change in strength was expected over that period.
Although maximum sustained winds were 50 mph, there were higher gusts.
Wind shear continued to attack the storm at high levels, but evidence was inconclusive as to whether that would kill the storm.
The first April subtropical storm since record keeping began developed in 1992 and was known as subtropical storm No. 1. Lawrence said that since
then, the decision was made to include subtropical storms in the same naming system as tropical storms and hurricanes.
Subtropical storm No. 1 in 1992 was the only Atlantic-Caribbean storm that year until Andrew, which savaged south Florida Aug. 24.
The hurricane season officially lasts from June 1 through Nov. 30, but there is no month in which a named storm has not occurred. Before 1992, the
last exception was April.
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