On three several hurricanes of the Atlantic, and their relations to the northers of Mexico and Central America, with notices of other storms . mvt. Relations of Storms to Contiguous Currents. 107 em and western coasts of Yucatan, the general winds are inter-rupted by hard Northers, in the season of them* That these northers of Central America move in a regularcourse of progression, like other storms, cannot well be the case of the Racers gale, we have seen that the course cor-responds with the westerly progression of hurricanes which havevisited the windward islands of the Antilles:
On three several hurricanes of the Atlantic, and their relations to the northers of Mexico and Central America, with notices of other storms . mvt. Relations of Storms to Contiguous Currents. 107 em and western coasts of Yucatan, the general winds are inter-rupted by hard Northers, in the season of them* That these northers of Central America move in a regularcourse of progression, like other storms, cannot well be the case of the Racers gale, we have seen that the course cor-responds with the westerly progression of hurricanes which havevisited the windward islands of the Antilles: while in the twoCuba storms, which have been considered, the northeasterly pro-gression has been found commencing in the northwesterly portionof the Caribean sea. A like course with the latter, I find waspursued also by other hurricanes from the Caribean sea, whichhave crossed the central portion of Cuba. A similar course, at least from the north side of Cuba, was takenby that destructive hurricane of the western Atlantic which pass-ed the coast of the United States on the 11th of December, hurricane which devastated the western pa
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, bookid60721150rnlm, bookyear1846