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So, Melissa had some record breaking intensity. At the time of its category 5 landfall in Jamaica, it had two main historical distinctions. The wind speed record, that was 185 mph, 295 kmh. That tied it for the strongest wind speed at landfall in the Atlantic basin with the 1935 Labor Day hurricane and Hurricane Dorian in 2019. It also set a pressure record where central pressure got down to 892 mbar. At landfall, that also tied the 1935 Labor Day hurricane for the most intense landfalling alert at Atlantic hurricane based on pressure. And it also had a very, very slow movement. So while it was approaching and eventually crossing Jamaica, the storm only moved at about 5 mph and that maximized the duration that the catastrophic winds had as they pummeled Jamaica and then to another extent you had torrential rainfall. So that led to erosion, significant flash flooding which also worsened the damage.
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