2019 Hypothetical Atlantic Hurricane Season (Sebastian's Version)

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The Hypothetical 2019 Atlantic hurricane season used up all the names in the 2019 (List 5) N. Atlantic and Greek naming system. The first storm formed on January 1 and the last storm dissipated on October 29. The strongest storm of the season was Hurriane Alpha that peaked with winds of 175mph (280km/h) and a minimum pressure of 904mbar. There were 60 total depressions, 45 named storms, 35 hurricanes, and 30 major hurricanes. The season had caused $20.921 billion in damages (2019 USD) and 2,121 fatalities. The costliest storm of the season was Hurricane Tau which caused $4.03 billion (2019 USD) in damages in the Lesser Antilles, Colombia, Venezuela, Jamaica, Central America, Mexico, and Texas combined. The deadliest storm of the season was Hurricane Rho which caused 517 total deaths in the Caribbean Islands, The Bahamas, and the United States combined. Hurricane Mu was the strongest storm to hit Greenland, the first storm to hit Greenland (still tropical), and the first major hurricane to hit Greenland (Category 3, 120mph (195km/h). Many storms were long lived with most of them lasting over a month or so, meaning that most of them surpassed the previous record of Hurricane John in the North Pacific Ocean back in 1994. Despite the hyperactivity, only one storm of all had reached Category 5 status which was the strongest storm of the season, Alpha with peak winds of 175mph (285km/h). A lot of systems reached major hurricanes unusually on a high latitude. Some long lived storms hit Europe with some still being tropical while they hit Europe.