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Tuesday morning, Hurricane Bertha changed its direction.
According to CNN, the National
Hurricane Center
announced that the first hurricane on the 2008 Atlantic season had a change of direction. The center of the storm was about 675 miles east-northeast of
the northern Leeward Islands and 1,035 miles southeast of Bermuda.
Experts say the hurricane’s power could decrease within the
next days. By Wednesday, the storm is expected to get weaker. Bertha became a
Category 3 hurricane on Monday. This means that wind speeds are expected to be
between 111 and 130 mph. The maximum sustained winds were near 120 mph,
informed The Associated Press.
While Bermuda could be affected by the
hurricane this weekend, the United States have very small chances to make
contact with the storm.
“It is still way too soon to determine whether or not Bertha
will affect Bermuda,” informed the National
Hurricane Center,
according to CNN.
The tropical storm formed less than a week ago several miles
off the western African shores, near the southern Cape Verde Islands.
It became a hurricane early Monday.
A hurricane is an extremely powerful storm and, even though the
hurricanes’ powerful winds and heavy rains are sometimes devastating, they
are also one of the most important mechanisms of the atmospheric circulation.
The Atlantic hurricane season ends in November.
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