Two new tropical storms over Atlantic

Published: Sept. 2, 2008 at 6:48 PM

MIAMI, Sept. 2 (UPI) -- Tropical Storm Ike formed Tuesday over the Atlantic Ocean, followed by Tropical Storm Josephine further east, U.S. forecasters in Miami reported.

The National Hurricane Center said at 5 p.m., Ike, centered about 1,030 miles east of the Leeward Islands, had sustained wind speeds of 60 mph with higher gusts.

The storm was moving west near 17 mph and forecasters said that was likely to continue for the next two days. Tropical storm-force winds extend 175 miles from the storm center, the report said.

Further east, a cyclonic tropical depression developed into Tropical Storm Josephine Tuesday morning. The 10th named system of the season was about 125 miles south of the southernmost Cape Verde Islands, the hurricane center said.

That system had sustained winds near 50 mph, extending outward 35 miles from the center. It was moving west-northwest near 14 mph and was expected to strengthen to the point of becoming a hurricane with winds above 74 mph as soon as Wednesday, the report said.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Police ticket Thanksgiving racers (2 min)
NBA: Orlando 93, Atlanta 76 (5 min)
NHL: Ottawa 2, Columbus 1 (18 min)
Colorado to keep Hawkins as coach
NFL: Dallas 24, Oakland 7
Rejected Gingrich gift goes to pit bulls
COL BKB: Texas A&M 69, Clemson 60
fark
Oxymoron headline: Swimmer drowns
Photoshop theme: Inappropriate celebrity product endorsements
Rare Winston Churchill TV screen test to be shown, get more viewers than "The Jay Leno Show"
"Hey kids, Daddy's going to run into the sailing shop and pick up a few things. Why don't you two...
Drug mule claims that he had no idea that the 67 packages he swallowed contained 2.2 lbs of cocaine...
Coed dorms leading to a massive increase in the obvious