Tropical storm Karen prompts hurricane watch from Louisiana to Florida (+video)
Landfall for tropical storm Karen is projected for early Sunday morning just east of Mobile, Ala. But forecast uncertainties mean it could come ashore anywhere from the New Orleans area to Indian Pass, Fla.
This
NOAA satellite image taken Thursday, Oct. 3, 2013 at 1:45 a.m. EDT
shows a low pressure system tracking across the Northern Plains with
showers and thunderstorms. Areas of scattered showers are seen over the
Ohio Valley and Tennessee Valley. Farther south a tropical disturbance
is seen moving into the eastern Gulf of Mexico. Fair weather is seen
over the Northeast.
Weather Underground/AP
Workers
pump water from the parking lot of the Dadeland Plaza shopping center,
Thursday, Oct. 3, 2013, after heavy rains in Pinecrest, Fla., a suburb
of Miami. Preparations began Thursday along the central Gulf Coast as
newly formed tropical storm Karen threatened to become the first named
tropical system to menace the United States this year.
Wilfredo Lee/AP
At 11 a.m., Eastern time, the storm was centered about 360 miles east southeast of Havana and was traveling into the northern Gulf of Mexico at about 12 miles an hour. Karen is packing maximum sustained winds of 65 miles an hour with gusts up to 75 miles an hour – hurricane-force gusts. Tropical-storm-force winds extend up to 105 miles from Karen's center.
Forecasters anticipate the storm will intensify into a hurricane Friday afternoon before weakening to a tropical storm by Saturday afternoon. Landfall is projected for early Sunday morning just east of Mobile, Ala.
Uncertainties in track forecasts this far in advance of landfall, however, point to the possibility of the storm coming ashore anywhere from the New Orleans area to Indian Pass. The actual track could affect the storm strength at landfall: A shift to the west of the currently projected path would yield a weaker storm, while a shift to the east would strengthen it, forecasters say.
Despite the storm's expected weakening prior to landfall, it could still be near hurricane strength when it crosses the coast, forecasters at the National Hurricane Center in Miami say.
Once the storm comes ashore, it is expected to head northeast, cutting across the southeast corner of Alabama, then across Georgia, and into eastern South Carolina as a tropical depression. By Tuesday, forecasters say they expect Karen's remnants to merge with a weather front along the Eastern Seaboard.
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