Updated at 8:05 p.m. ET
The National Hurricane Center says the eye of Hurricane Patricia has made landfall near Cuixmala on Mexico's southwestern Pacific coast. Its winds were measured at 165 mph, somewhat weakened but still a Category 5 storm capable of catastrophic damage.
Our original post continues:
Hurricane Patricia is bearing down on Mexico's Pacific coast Friday. Forecasters say this could be potentially catastrophic. It's a monster storm with
sustained winds of 200 mph
Thursday Patricia went from a weak tropical storm to a top-of-the-scale Category 5 hurricane in just
25 hours
Some have compared this to
Super Typhoon Haiyan
Patricia is a "small" storm — the most powerful winds don't extend very far beyond its eye, perhaps only about 30 or 40 miles. It's similar in size to Hurricane Andrew, a devastating but compact hurricane that walloped South Florida in 1992. Also, the storm surge from Patricia might not be as bad given the rapid intensification. Still, later Friday, it will smack Mexico very, very hard; rain, flooding and mudslides threaten to be the biggest killer.
This is an El Nino event. The storm's rapid intensification is fueled primarily by one thing: very warm ocean waters — 87 degrees where it swirls above. Not only that but the warm waters are very deep, adding more fuel.
The number of Category 5 hurricanes in the Pacific basin has been impressive this year, but not unprecedented. Meteorologists and other climate watchers are already asking: "
Is Hurricane Patricia what global warming looks like?
Also, as a Category 5 storm, Patricia is at the top of the
Saffir-Simpson
Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit
http://www.npr.org/