User:Iune/Test3/Sandbox

In early June, a well-defined area of low pressure produced disorganized weather several hundred miles from the Pacific coast of Mexico. By June 7, the low developed sufficiently organized deep convection to be classified as a tropical cyclone, and the National Hurricane Center (NHC) upgraded it to Tropical Depression One-E at 1500 UTC, about 365 mi (590 km) south of Acapulco. Upon developing, the depression was located over warm sea surface temperatures, and upper-level wind shear in its vicinity was forecast to remain conducive for intensification. Caught in weak steering currents, the depression further developed as it remained nearly stationary; it was upgraded to Tropical Storm Adrian later that day, with winds of 60 mph (95 km/h).

Current storm information
As of 2:00 pm PDT (1800 UTC) June 8, the center of Tropical Storm Adrian was located at about 13.5°N, -101.6°W, about 260 mi (420 km) SSW of Acapulco, and about 290 mi (465 km) S of Zihuatanejo in Mexico. Adrian has a central minimum pressure of 994 mbar (hPa; 29.35 inHg), and has maximum sustained winds of 70 mph (110 km/h), with higher gusts. The storm is moving to the north-northwest at 9 mph (15 km/h).

Current watches and warnings
For latest official information see:
 * The NHC's latest public advisory on Tropical Storm Adrian.
 * The NHC's latest forecast discussion on Tropical Storm Adrian.