Hurricane Dolores
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The name Dolores (or Delores, a misspelling) has been used for twelve tropical cyclones in the Eastern Pacific Ocean and for one in the Western Pacific. In the Eastern Pacific: *
Hurricane Dolores (1966) The 1966 Pacific hurricane season started on May 15, 1966, and ended November 30, 1966. The season was of little note. Hurricane Blanca traveled 4,300 miles, setting a new record. During September and October of the year, Hurricane Helga and Tropi ...
– Category 1 hurricane that stayed out at sea. *
Tropical Depression Dolores (1970) The 1970 Pacific hurricane season began on May 15, 1970 in the east Pacific, and on June 1, 1970 in the central Pacific. It ended on November 30, 1970. These dates conventionally delimit the period of time when tropical cyclones form in the easter ...
– operationally thought to have reached tropical storm strength. *
Hurricane Dolores (1974) Hurricane Dolores was regarded as the worst hurricane to strike Acapulco since 1938. Developing on June 13, 1974, the system rapidly organized into a tropical storm the next day off the southern coast of Mexico. Over the following day, Dol ...
– made landfall in the vicinity of Acapulco. *
Hurricane Dolores (1979) The 1979 Pacific hurricane season was an inactive season, featuring 10 named storms, 6 hurricanes, and 4 major hurricanes. It featured zero tropical cyclones in the Central Pacific, the most recent occurrence on record as of 2021. An average year ...
– Category 3 hurricane that stayed out at sea. *
Hurricane Dolores (1985) The 1985 Pacific hurricane season is the third-most active Pacific hurricane season on record. It officially started on May 15, 1985, in the eastern Pacific, and on June 1, 1985, in the central Pacific, and lasted until November 30, 1985. These d ...
– Category 3 hurricane that never affected land. *
Hurricane Delores (1991) The 1991 Pacific hurricane season was a near-average Pacific hurricane season. The worst storm this year was Tropical Storm Ignacio, which killed 23 people in Mexico and injured 40 others. Elsewhere, Hurricane Fefa caused flooding in Hawaii. Hu ...
– did not make landfall. *
Hurricane Dolores (1997) The 1997 Pacific hurricane season was a very active hurricane season. With hundreds of deaths and hundreds of millions of dollars in damage, this season was one of the costliest and deadliest Pacific hurricane seasons. This was due to the excep ...
– Category 1 hurricane that never affected land. *
Tropical Storm Dolores (2003) The 2003 Pacific hurricane season was the first season to feature no major hurricanes – storms of Category 3 intensity or higher on the Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale (SSHWS) – since 1977. The dates conventionally delimiting the ...
– short-lived storm that never threatened land. *
Tropical Storm Dolores (2009) The 2009 Pacific hurricane season was the most active Pacific hurricane season since 1994. The season officially started on May 15 in the East Pacific Ocean, and on June 1 in the Central Pacific; they both ended on November 30. These dates convent ...
– short-lived storm. *
Hurricane Dolores (2015) Hurricane Dolores was a powerful and moderately damaging tropical cyclone whose remnants brought record-breaking heavy rains and strong winds to California. The seventh named storm, fourth hurricane, and third major hurricane of the record-breaki ...
– Category 4 hurricane that brought record-breaking rain to Southern California. *
Tropical Storm Dolores (2021) Tropical Storm Dolores was a strong tropical storm that affected several states in southwestern Mexico in June 2021. The fourth named storm of the 2021 Pacific hurricane season, Dolores developed from a low-pressure area that formed offshore the s ...
– made landfall in Southwestern Mexico. In the Western Pacific: * Tropical Storm Dolores (1948) (T4813) – Storm that dissipated off the coast of Japan: also named Eunice after Dolores was thought to have dissipated operationally. {{DEFAULTSORT:Dolores Pacific hurricane set index articles Pacific typhoon set index articles