Hurricanes
Isaac and Joyce swirled across the central Atlantic Ocean
early Thursday, a dynamic duo that forecasters predict have
different futures.Hurricane
Joyce was moving west with top sustained winds of 90 mph,
but was not expected to strengthen throughout the day because
of a westerly shear, forecasters said.
Hurricane
Isaac, with top wind speeds of 120 mph, swirled across
the open sea about 975 miles northwest of Joyce, the 10th
named storm of the season.
Neither
system posed any immediate threat to land.
``Isaac
is no threat to any land in the foreseeable future,''
said Jack Beven, a hurricane specialist at the National
Hurricane Center in Miami. ``Joyce could be a threat to
the Caribbean islands several days away, but it's too
early to say with any certainty yet.''
Joyce,
which formed as a tropical storm Monday, was expected
to make a turn to the north in several days, said hurricane
specialist James Franklin.
``What
we don't know is how sharp that turn will be,'' he said.
``If it's a modest turn it would go into the Caribbean.''
At
5 a.m. EDT, Joyce was centered about 1,135 miles east
of the Windward Islands and was moving west at about 12
mph. Isaac was about 925 miles east-southeast of Bermuda
and moving northwest at about 16 mph.
Isaac's
winds were forecast to continue re-strengthening. After
reaching top winds of 120 mph Saturday, it had lost power
for several days as other weather systems began affecting
it. It cleared those systems and rebuilding began Wednesday.
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