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Matt Rosenberg

Hurricane Season Ends Record-Breaking Year

By , About.com GuideNovember 30, 2005

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The Atlantic and Eastern Pacific hurricane seasons end today, November 30. It's been a record-breaking year in the Atlantic; according to FEMA...

  • In 154 years of record-keeping, this year had the most named storms (26, including Tropical Storm Epsilon, which formed Tuesday), the most hurricanes (13), the highest number of major hurricanes hitting the U.S. (4), and the most top-scale Category 5 hurricanes (3).
  • Katrina was the deadliest U.S. hurricane since 1928 (more than 1,300 dead) and replaced 1992's Andrew as the most expensive one on record ($34.4 billion in insured losses).
  • Total insured losses from hurricanes this year were put at $47.2 billion, above the previous record of $22.9 billion set last year when four hurricanes also hit the U.S., according to risk-analysis firm ISO.
  • Wilma was briefly the most intense Atlantic hurricane on record in terms of minimum central pressure (882 millibars). It also was the fastest-strengthening storm on record — its top sustained winds increased 105 mph in 24 hours in the Caribbean.
  • Forecasters exhausted their list of 21 proper names (Arlene, Bret, Cindy and so on) and had to use the Greek alphabet to name storms for the first time.
Even though the season is pretty much over, there's Tropical Storm Epsilon (the 26th named storm of the season and the fifth named using the Greek alphabet) hanging out in the Atlantic.

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