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The 2012 Atlantic hurricane season was the final year in a string of three consecutive very active seasons since 2010, with 19 tropical storms. The 2012 season was also a costly one in terms of property damage, mostly due to Hurricane Sandy .
September 1–2, 1932: The 1932 Florida–Alabama hurricane passed through Mississippi as a tropical storm. [5] September 20, 1932: A tropical storm made landfall in Louisiana and moved through Mississippi. [5] June 16–17, 1934: The 1934 Central America hurricane moved through Mississippi as a tropical storm after making landfall in Louisiana ...
The 2012 Atlantic hurricane season was an event in the annual hurricane season in the north Atlantic Ocean.For the third year in a row there were 19 named storms. [1] The season officially began on June 1, 2012, and ended on November 30, 2012, dates that conventionally delimit the period of each year when most tropical cyclones develop in the Atlantic basin. [2]
While this has listed a bit more to the west in direction since the projections by the National Hurricane Center made yesterday, this storm Hurricane Center: Now There are Two Named Atlantic ...
The passage of Hurricane Isaac generated a long-lived, nine-day tornado outbreak that affected the Central and Eastern United States from August 27 to September 4, 2012. The hurricane produced a total of 34 tornadoes, with the strongest being two EF2 tornadoes in Mississippi and Arkansas.
At least two people have died as severe storms and tornadoes tore through parts of Texas and Mississippi on Saturday, officials said, while a parade of atmospheric river-fueled storms batters the ...
The year began with an unusual number of tornadoes during January 2012. The first major tornado outbreak occurred on January 22–23, when a spring-like system moved across the southern Mississippi valley, producing at least two dozen confirmed tornadoes across Arkansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Alabama. As a whole, January was the ...
Thunderstorms repeatedly doused the same area for several hours, allowing 2- to 3-inch rain amounts, including in towns across south-central Mississippi, south of Jackson, like Brookhaven and McComb.