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- Q206633 subject Q8135685.
- Q206633 subject Q8274926.
- Q206633 subject Q8349468.
- Q206633 abstract "The 1933 Tampico hurricane was one of two storms in the 1933 Atlantic hurricane season to reach Category 5 intensity on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale. It developed on September 16 near the Lesser Antilles, and slowly intensified while moving across the Caribbean Sea. Becoming a hurricane on September 19, its strengthening rate increased while passing south of Jamaica. Two days later, the hurricane reached peak winds, estimated at 160 mph (260 km/h). After weakening, it made landfall on the Yucatán Peninsula, destroying several houses. One person was killed offshore Progreso, Yucatán during the storm.Over land, the hurricane weakened to a tropical storm, although it re-intensified slightly in the Gulf of Mexico. On September 25, it made a second landfall just south of Tampico, Tamaulipas with winds at around 110 mph (180 km/h), and it quickly dissipated over land. Damage was heaviest there, estimated at $5 million (1933 USD) and there were hundreds of deaths. About 75% of the houses in Tampico were damaged, including about 50% of houses that had severe to total destruction to their roofs. The destruction prompted the declaration of martial law, and there was a curfew instated.".
- Q206633 thumbnail 1933_Tampico_hurricane_21_Sep_1933.png?width=300.
- Q206633 wikiPageWikiLink Q11157129.
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- Q206633 wikiPageWikiLink Q81033.
- Q206633 wikiPageWikiLink Q8135685.
- Q206633 wikiPageWikiLink Q81809.
- Q206633 wikiPageWikiLink Q8274926.
- Q206633 wikiPageWikiLink Q8349468.
- Q206633 wikiPageWikiLink Q93259.
- Q206633 wikiPageWikiLink Q93318.
- Q206633 wikiPageWikiLink Q953484.
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- Q206633 comment "The 1933 Tampico hurricane was one of two storms in the 1933 Atlantic hurricane season to reach Category 5 intensity on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale. It developed on September 16 near the Lesser Antilles, and slowly intensified while moving across the Caribbean Sea. Becoming a hurricane on September 19, its strengthening rate increased while passing south of Jamaica. Two days later, the hurricane reached peak winds, estimated at 160 mph (260 km/h).".
- Q206633 label "1933 Tampico hurricane".
- Q206633 depiction 1933_Tampico_hurricane_21_Sep_1933.png.