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Tropical Storm Bertha Continues Across Atlantic
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US: July 18, 2008


MIAMI - Tropical Storm Bertha continued to trek across the open waters of the Atlantic on Thursday on its way to possibly becoming one of the longest-lived tropical storms on record.


By 11 a.m. EDT (1500 GMT), what had been for a while the first hurricane of the 2008 Atlantic storm season was located around 390 miles (630 km) east-northeast of Bermuda, the US National Hurricane Center said.

Bertha's top sustained winds were around 60 miles per hour (95 km per hour) and the storm was moving to the east-southeast at 9 mph (15 kph), the Miami-based hurricane center said.

The storm was expected to turn directly east later on Thursday and then resume a course to the northeast that would eventually see it lose its tropical characteristics over the cooler waters of the North Atlantic.

Bertha has displayed an impressive resilience since forming on July 3, especially for a storm that formed so early in the six-month Atlantic hurricane season. The storm season begins on June 1 but rarely gets into gear before August.

"Bertha could become one of the top 10 longest-lived storms in history if it survives until the weekend," the hurricane center wrote in a discussion item on the storm.

Bertha brushed by the British colony of Bermuda on Monday, knocking out power to thousands of homes but causing no injuries.

It briefly grew into a "major" Category 3 hurricane on the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale, the same strength that Hurricane Katrina had attained when it came ashore near New Orleans in 2005.

Elsewhere in the tropics, an area of low pressure over the southern Caribbean had become less organized overnight and seemed less likely to become the third tropical depression of the summer, the hurricane center said.

That system had been of some concern to energy markets as computer models indicated it had the potential to head toward the oil and gas rigs of the Gulf of Mexico where the United States gets a third of its domestically produced crude.

Another area of disturbed weather near Central America was expected to bring potentially dangerous downpours to Honduras and Nicaragua but was not seen as a threat to the Gulf or the United States. (Reporting by Michael Christie, Editing by Philip Barbara)


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE



© 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
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