Hurricane Celia
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hurricane_Celia an entity of type: Thing
El huracán Celia fue el tercer ciclón tropical en recibir nombre de la Temporada de huracanes en el Atlántico de 1970, merodeó por el Caribe y el golfo de México entre el 31 de julio y el 5 de agosto. La tormenta causó $450 millones de dólares (USD) $2 mil millones (2007 USD) y mató a 16 personas en Cuba y en Texas. Fue la tormenta más fuerte de la temporada.
rdf:langString
Hurricane Celia was the costliest tropical cyclone in Texas history until Hurricane Alicia in 1983. The third named storm, second hurricane, and first major hurricane of the 1970 Atlantic hurricane season, Celia developed from a tropical wave in the western Caribbean Sea on July 31. Initially, the depression tracked north-northwestward without significantly strengthening, and crossed over western Cuba on August 1. Heavy rains on the island caused severe flooding, leading to five fatalities. The depression entered the Gulf of Mexico and was upgraded to Tropical Storm Celia later on August 1. Due to warm sea surface temperatures, Celia rapidly intensified into a major hurricane on August 1 and after the creation of the Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale in 1971 it was estimated to have been
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Huracán Celia (1970)
rdf:langString
Hurricane Celia
rdf:langString
Hurricane Celia
xsd:integer
987081
xsd:integer
1112696792
xsd:integer
120
rdf:langString
Western Cuba, Coastal Florida and Texas
rdf:langString
Atl
xsd:date
1970-08-05
xsd:integer
1970
xsd:integer
1
xsd:integer
930
xsd:integer
27
xsd:date
1970-07-31
rdf:langString
Hurricane Celia at landfall.gif
rdf:langString
Hurricane Celia making landfall in Texas
xsd:integer
944
rdf:langString
hurricane
xsd:integer
1970
rdf:langString
Hurricane Celia was the costliest tropical cyclone in Texas history until Hurricane Alicia in 1983. The third named storm, second hurricane, and first major hurricane of the 1970 Atlantic hurricane season, Celia developed from a tropical wave in the western Caribbean Sea on July 31. Initially, the depression tracked north-northwestward without significantly strengthening, and crossed over western Cuba on August 1. Heavy rains on the island caused severe flooding, leading to five fatalities. The depression entered the Gulf of Mexico and was upgraded to Tropical Storm Celia later on August 1. Due to warm sea surface temperatures, Celia rapidly intensified into a major hurricane on August 1 and after the creation of the Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale in 1971 it was estimated to have been a Category 3 storm. Storm surge and swells lashed the west coast of Florida, especially the Panhandle, causing eight people to drown. Early on August 2, Celia began to weaken. However, the storm underwent rapid deepening again and peaked as a Category 4 hurricane with winds of 140 mph (220 km/h) on August 3. In Louisiana, tides caused minor coastal flooding. Minor erosion damage was reported along Highway 82 in Cameron Parish. Late afternoon on August 3, Celia made landfall near Corpus Christi, Texas. Throughout the state, 8,950 homes were destroyed and damaged about 55,650 others. About 252 small businesses, 331 boats, and 310 farm buildings were either damaged or destroyed. Impact was the worst in Nueces County, which observed gusts as high as 180 mph (290 km/h). In Corpus Christi, about one-third of houses suffered severe damage or were destroyed. Additionally, about 90% of the buildings in downtown were damaged to some degree. Celia weakened as it continued further inland and dissipated over New Mexico on August 6. The remnants of Celia brought up to 2 inches (51 mm) of rainfall to the state. Overall, this storm caused 28 deaths and $930 million (1970 USD) in damage.
rdf:langString
El huracán Celia fue el tercer ciclón tropical en recibir nombre de la Temporada de huracanes en el Atlántico de 1970, merodeó por el Caribe y el golfo de México entre el 31 de julio y el 5 de agosto. La tormenta causó $450 millones de dólares (USD) $2 mil millones (2007 USD) y mató a 16 personas en Cuba y en Texas. Fue la tormenta más fuerte de la temporada.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
34006