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Weekend Storm Spares Unalaska; Hits Adak Hard

Crystal Dushkin

The storm that meteorologists warned could be bigger than 2014's Typhoon Nuri turned out to be less severe than predicted. At least here in Unalaska.

The Unalaska Dept. of Public Safety received no reports of damage from the weekend's heavy weather, according to deputy police chief Mike Holman.

Meteorologist Luis Ingram at the National Weather Service office in Anchorage said Monday morning that Nuri took a different path than this weekend's storm.

"This one came out of the north Pacific, migrated into the Bering Sea along the western chain of the Aleutians and then proceeded to move more north," Ingram said. "I believe Nuri's path took it a little more easterly than northerly."

Ingram said a buoy positioned in the far western Aleutians recorded a low pressure of 929 millibars, a measurement of atmospheric pressure. At its height, Nuri dropped to a central low pressure of 924 millibars.

During the height of this weekend's storm, when it was centered between Adak and Shemya Islands, a tracking buoy cataloged some impressive seas.

"We did measure high seas about 53 feet. That buoy, unfortunately, has since gone off-line, most likely due to the fact of the storm itself," Ingram said. "So, you know, what data we have out there is a little sparse right now just because not all the buoys are back up and running."

Islands further west than Unalaska were hit much harder. On Adak Island, a wind gust was clocked at 122 mph Sunday.

Adak city manager Layton Lockett says the damage was substantial.

"We looked at and saw it was comparable to a category three hurricane. A lot of personal property damage... the solariums that are attached to people's homes... A lot of the bigger warehouse buildings had significant damage to them from the pressure and the battering that we received," Lockett said. "To my understanding, airline cargo containers flew across the island, not just a few feet...so we received significant damage in that area, roof top bins across the roads and wrapping around poles that we're now just trying to clean up now that it's calmed down enough so that it's safe to be outside."

Crystal Dushkin, a cultural administrator for the Atka Tribe, said in a Facebook post that the storm did cause quite a bit of damage on Atka Island.

Dushkin writes that the island's playground was toppled over, satellite dishes were careened off their mounting and the fence surrounding the GCI building was blown over.

The Coast Guard stations in Dutch Harbor, Anchorage and Juneau all reported no search and rescue calls came in over the weekend, and no damage to any facilities. The Coast Guard command center in Anchorage said this morning they got reports of 57-foot seas when the storm approached and 37-foot seas as it diminished.

In the Pribilof Islands  - 200 miles north of Unalaska  - staff at the Public Safety Department and the Harbor office  said they had no reports of any storm-related damage on land or sea. 

Greta Mart worked for KUCB in 2015 and 2016.
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