Remnant of storm Javier surges tropical moisture, floods threat issued in Southwest US

August 10, 2016 5:37 PM 5:10 PM | Skymet Weather Team

August 10, 2016 5:10 PM

 

   


August 9, 2016 5:30 PM

   


Published on August 8, 2016 12:40 PM: Tropical Storm Javier forms near Mexico, Hurricane alert issued for Baja California

Tropical Storm Javier has formed near the Mexico's Pacific coast on Sunday and is likely to move along the coast during the next two days.

The storm will shift in north direction towards Mexico's southern Baja California peninsula including Cabo San Lucas by Monday. In the wake of this, hurricane watches and warnings have been issued for the region.

Javier has been producing squally winds with maximum sustained winds of 72 kmph and as of Sunday it was located around 337 km southeast of Cabo San Lucas.

According to meteorologists, torrential rains along with damaging winds are expected to lash several parts of Mexico during the next few days.

However, weathermen predict that Javier is not likely to intensify quickly due its interaction with the land despite of plenty of warm sea water.

In coming days, Javier is expected to produce heavy rainfall ranging between 100 mm to 225 mm over coastal parts of Colima, Jalisco, Michoacan and Nayarit states on Tuesday.

In addition to this, the storm could also infuse tropical moisture over the parts of the Southwest US by midweek. With this, we could expect some locally heavy rain and flash floods in areas of Arizona, New Mexico, Utah and Colorado.

Image Credit: indianexpress.com

 

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