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Hurricane Zeta makes landfall on Yucatan Peninsula

The system brought winds of 80mph and is predicted to make its way north to the US.

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Hurricane Zeta, the 27th named storm in a very busy Atlantic season, made landfall on the Caribbean coast of the eastern Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico late on Monday while lashing the resorts around Tulum with rain and wind.

The US National Hurricane Centre said Zeta came ashore just north of Tulum with maximum sustained winds of 80 mph.

Quintana Roo state governor Carlos Joaquin had warned “nobody should be on the streets … you shouldn’t go out anymore” until the hurricane passed.

Zeta was predicted to lose some power while crossing the peninsula, before regaining hurricane strength in the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday while heading for the central US Gulf Coast and a likely landfall on Wednesday night.

A hurricane watch was posted from Morgan City, Louisiana, to the Mississippi-Alabama border.

Mexico Tropical Weather
A woman waits for clients outside a supermarket with its windows covered with plywood as Zeta approached Cancun (Victor Ruiz Garcia/AP)

Zeta broke the record for the previous earliest 27th Atlantic named storm that formed on November 29 2005. It is also the 11th hurricane of the season. An average season brings six hurricanes and 12 named storms.

There have been so many storms this season that the hurricane centre had to turn to the Greek alphabet after running out of assigned names.

Zeta is the furthest into the Greek alphabet the Atlantic season has gone.

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