Tropical Storm Beryl

The name Beryl has been used for seven tropical cyclones in the Atlantic Ocean.

  • Tropical Storm Beryl (1982), moved across Atlantic but dissipated north of the Windward Islands; caused moderate damage and 3 deaths in Cape Verde.
  • Tropical Storm Beryl (1988), formed over Louisiana and drifted into the Gulf of Mexico before making landfall at New Orleans, causing one death at sea and about $4 million in damage.
  • Tropical Storm Beryl (1994), went onshore at Panama City, Florida, 12 hours after forming; quickly went up the eastern states, dropping heavy rain and spawning many tornadoes; $73 million in damage, mostly in South Carolina.
  • Tropical Storm Beryl (2000), made landfall in Mexico near the Texas border, causing one drowning death and some damage.
  • Tropical Storm Beryl (2006), formed southeast of North Carolina, brushed coastal Massachusetts and dissipated over Atlantic Canada.
  • Tropical Storm Beryl (2012), formed in late May, and made landfall in Jacksonville Beach, Florida with 70 mph (110 km/h) winds.
  • Hurricane Beryl (2018), an unusually small Category 1 hurricane which dissipated before approaching the Lesser Antilles, its remnants regenerated into a subtropical storm well to the north of Bermuda without posing a threat to land.

Beryl also has been used in the South-West Indian Ocean.

  • Severe Tropical Storm Beryl (1961)
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