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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Storm Emily gaining strength


Diver Reese Kennedy swims between coral-encrusted guns on the wreck of the Spiegel Grove on Tuesday off Key Largo, Fla., in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Divers discovered the ship flipped upright after Hurricane Dennis passed. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Ken Kaye South Florida Sun-Sentinel

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. – Tropical Storm Emily likely will spin into a hurricane today and continue molding this unprecedented season into a remarkable stretch of hurricane history.

Emily is the fifth named storm to form in July, the first time that has happened since the U.S. began keeping storm records in 1851. Emily also stands to become the second major hurricane to develop this month, after Dennis, which struck near Pensacola on Sunday.

Late on Tuesday, Emily was in the Atlantic, 350 miles southeast of Barbabos, or about 1,950 miles southeast of Miami, churning west at 20 mph with sustained winds of 50 mph. Hurricane warnings have been issued for the Windward Islands, which face 3 to 6 inches of rain and coastal flooding.

The long range forecast takes the system south of the Dominican Republic on Friday, near Jamaica on Saturday and south of western Cuba on Sunday as a Category 3 system, packing 115 mph winds.

High pressure north of Emily might keep the system’s path south of Florida, said James Franklin, hurricane specialist with the National Hurricane Center in Miami-Dade County. But he said it’s too early to say for sure.

“At five days out, you hesitate to take anybody off the hook,” he said.

Why is this season so active so early?

Primarily, the atmosphere is abnormally calm with low wind shear, which can break storms apart, said Dave Roberts, a Navy meteorologist assigned to the hurricane center.

“You usually don’t see tropical waves turning into hurricanes in July,” he said. “That usually doesn’t happen until August.”

In addition, the Atlantic is significantly warmer than normal because of a natural cycle of warm water shifting to the tropical region, where hurricanes are spawned and nurtured. Scientists say that shift has resulted in an era of storm intensity that could last another 10 to 30 years.

Another factor: Tropical waves, or blobs of low pressure that seed hurricanes, are very robust as they come off the coast of Africa, said Chris Landsea, a research meteorologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s hurricane research division.

“There’s a lot of rotation to them, a lot of warm moisture being sucked in,” he said.

That both Dennis and Emily formed at low latitudes means “conditions already are conducive for hurricanes to form. That tells us it’s going to stay busy,” Landsea said.

Richard Pfeffer, a Florida State University professor and an expert in hurricane formation, said global warming shouldn’t be blamed for the storms’ early arrival.

“Records are set all the time,” he said. “With so many forming right now, I think we have to take it for what it is; conditions are ripe.”