CNN
—
Hurricane Roslyn slammed into west-central Mexico on Sunday, bringing torrential rain and threatening inland flooding.
“This rainfall may result in flash flooding and landslides in areas of rugged terrain, the Miami-based Nationwide Hurricane Middle stated.

As of two p.m. ET Sunday, Roslyn was centered about 90 kilometers (55 miles) south-southeast of Durango, Mexico, the hurricane heart stated. It was transferring north-northeast at 31 kilometers per hour (20 mph).
“Swells generated by Roslyn will have an effect on parts of the coast of southwestern Mexico, west-central Mexico, and the southern portion of the Baja California peninsula via tonight,” the hurricane heart stated.
“These swells are prone to trigger life-threatening surf and rip present situations.”

Roslyn made landfall round 7:20 a.m. ET close to Santa Cruz in northern Nayarit state, whipping most sustained winds of 120 mph, the hurricane heart stated.
A “major hurricane” is one with most sustained winds of at the least 111 mph.
“Most sustained winds have decreased to close 70 mph (110 km/h) with larger gusts,” the hurricane center stated Sunday afternoon.
“Speedy weakening is anticipated to proceed, and Roslyn is forecast to grow to be a tropical despair by this night and dissipate tonight or early Monday.”
Roslyn fashioned off the western coast of Mexico and its sustained wind pace elevated by 60 mph in a 24-hour interval from Friday to Saturday morning – a rapid intensification.
The hurricane has been monitoring equally to Hurricane Orlene, which made landfall October 3 simply north of the Nayarit-Sinaloa border.