Hurricane Adrian (2011)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hurricane_Adrian_(2011) an entity of type: WikicatCategory4PacificHurricanes

Hurricane Adrian was an intense, albeit short-lived early-season Category 4 hurricane that brought heavy rainfall and high waves to Mexico in June 2011 during the 2011 Pacific hurricane season. Adrian originated from an area of disturbed weather which had developed during the course of early June, off the Pacific coast of Mexico. On June 7, it acquired a sufficiently organized structure with deep convection to be classified as a tropical cyclone, and the National Hurricane Center (NHC) designated it as Tropical Depression One-E, the first one of 2011. It further strengthened to be upgraded into a tropical storm later that day. Adrian moved rather slowly; briefly recurving northward after being caught in the steering winds. After steady intensification, it was upgraded into a hurricane on J rdf:langString
rdf:langString Hurricane Adrian (2011)
rdf:langString Hurricane Adrian
xsd:integer 32024831
xsd:integer 1117838759
xsd:integer 120
rdf:langString Southwestern Mexico
rdf:langString EPac
xsd:date 2011-06-14
xsd:integer 2011
rdf:langString None
rdf:langString None reported
xsd:date 2011-06-07
rdf:langString EP012011_Adrian
rdf:langString File:Adrian 2011-06-10 0925Z.jpg
xsd:gMonthDay --06-10
xsd:integer 944
rdf:langString Tropical Cyclone Report for Adrian
rdf:langString hurricane
xsd:integer 2011
rdf:langString Hurricane Adrian was an intense, albeit short-lived early-season Category 4 hurricane that brought heavy rainfall and high waves to Mexico in June 2011 during the 2011 Pacific hurricane season. Adrian originated from an area of disturbed weather which had developed during the course of early June, off the Pacific coast of Mexico. On June 7, it acquired a sufficiently organized structure with deep convection to be classified as a tropical cyclone, and the National Hurricane Center (NHC) designated it as Tropical Depression One-E, the first one of 2011. It further strengthened to be upgraded into a tropical storm later that day. Adrian moved rather slowly; briefly recurving northward after being caught in the steering winds. After steady intensification, it was upgraded into a hurricane on June 9. The storm subsequently entered a phase of rapid intensification, developing a distinct eye with good outflow in all quadrants. Followed by this period of rapid intensification, it obtained sustained winds fast enough to be considered a major hurricane and reached its peak intensity as a category 4 hurricane that evening. Adrian weakened throughout June 10 to June 12 as increased vertical wind shear persisted around its vicinity. It was downgraded into a tropical storm on June 11 as the once organized structure deteriorated, further so into a tropical depression the following day. Adrian subsequently decayed into a remnant low-pressure area with very little convection, all dislocated to the northeast of the low-level center. Degeneration continued and Adrian disintegrated into a swirl of low clouds, drifting due to the northwest. Since Adrian stayed at sea, its effects along coastlines were limited. Damages, if any, remains unknown, and no fatalities were reported as a result of the Adrian.
xsd:gMonthDay --06-12
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 20700

data from the linked data cloud