Hurricane Gilbert

Hurricane Gilbert

Hurricane Gilbert near maximum intensity.
Duration Sept. 8 - 19, 1988
Highest winds 185 mph (295 km/h) sustained
Damages $7-9 billion (2005 dollars)
Fatalities 318 direct
Areas affected Windward Islands, Venezuela, Haiti, Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Central America, Yucatan Peninsula, northern Mexico, Texas, South Central United States
Part of the 1988 Atlantic hurricane season

Hurricane Gilbert is the second most intense hurricane ever observed in the Atlantic Basin. It wreaked havoc in the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico for nearly 9 days during the 1988 Atlantic hurricane season. It killed 318 people and caused many billions of dollars in damages over the course of its path.

Contents

Storm history

Tropical Depression Twelve formed on September 8, 1988 near the Windward Islands. While feeding off the warm waters (81°F/27°C) of the Caribbean, the storm quickly strengthened into Tropical Storm Gilbert on September 9, becoming the seventh named storm of the season. It strengthened even more and became a major hurricane on September 10, the climatological peak of the Atlantic hurricane season.

Gilbert's west-northwesterly movement brought it to first make landfall in Jamaica. The eyewall crossed completely over Jamaica on September 12 with 150 mph (240 km/h) winds, putting it at Category 4 on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale. It was the first hurricane to make direct landfall in Jamaica since the 1951 season.

Gilbert moved off the coast of Jamaica only to strengthen rapidly. The hurricane reached the lower edge of Category 5 while slamming into Grand Cayman.

Extreme intensification continued until Gilbert reached a minimum pressure of 888 mbar (hPa), which was the lowest pressure ever recorded in the history of the western hemisphere and made Gilbert the most intense Atlantic Ocean hurricane on record until it was surpassed by Hurricane Wilma in 2005. At its peak, Gilbert sustained winds of 185 mph (295 km/h) (although Hurricanes Camille and Allen had higher wind speed, hurricane intensity is measured in terms of pressure).

Gilbert made landfall for a second time in Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula on September 14 as a Category 5 hurricane, making it the first Category 5 to make landfall since Camille 19 years earlier in 1969. Major hurricane status was held as the storm made landfall for a third time near La Pesca, Tamaulipas, Mexico, on September 16. Gilbert spawned 29 tornadoes in Texas on September 18 and caused flooding in the midwest. Gilbert lost its strength when it merged with a frontal boundary in Texas on September 19.

Top ten most intense Atlantic hurricanes since measurements began

Hurricane intensity is measured solely by central pressure; source: NOAA

North Atlantic Landfall U.S.
Rank Hurricane Year Minimum pressure
recorded
mbar (hPa)
Rank Hurricane Year Minimum pressure
at landfall
mbar (hPa)
1 Wilma 2005 882 1 Labor Day 1935 892
2 Gilbert 1988 888 2 Camille 1969 909
3 Labor Day 1935 892 3 Katrina 2005 918
4 Rita 2005 897 4 Andrew 1992 922
5 Allen 1980 899 5 Indianola 1886 925
6 Katrina 2005 902 6 Florida Keys 1919 927
7 Camille 1969 905 7 Okeechobee 1928 929
8 Mitch 1998 905 8 Donna 1960 930
9 Ivan 2004 910 9 New Orleans 1915 931
10 Janet 1955 914 10 Carla 1961 931
Based on data from: The Weather Channel Based on data from: U.S. National Hurricane Center

Impact

Deaths from Gilbert
(totals may not match)
Region Deaths
Mexico202
Jamaica45
Haiti30
Guatemala12
Venezuela5
Dominican Republic5
United States3
Costa Rica2
Nicaragua2
Total318

Gilbert claimed 318 lives, mostly in Mexico. Exact monetary damage figures are not available, but the total for all areas affected by Gilbert is estimated to be near $5 billion (1988 USD).

The name Gilbert was retired in the spring of 1989, and was replaced by Gordon in the 1994 season.

American journalist Jules Siegel was living in Puerto Morelos, Quintana Roo, Mexico (near Cancun) with his family. The hurricane hit Puerto Morelos dead-on, but the entire town population was evacuated to Cancun. Siegel's account of this experience was published in a local newspaper in Spanish and is available in English on his website.

See also

External links