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Karl Kills 2, Storm Remnants Drench Mexico

Last Updated 8:31 a.m. ET

Authorities in central Mexico were on alert early Saturday for possible mudslides and flooding as the remnants of Hurricane Karl pushed inland hours after the storm swept onto the Gulf coast and killed two people.

Out in the Atlantic, meanwhile, Hurricane Igor strengthened into a Category 2 storm and became better organized on a track to approach Bermuda late Sunday.

Karl, which caused widespread property damage as a hurricane in the port city of Veracruz, weakened to a tropical depression Friday night. It was dissipating over the mountains early Saturday, but still was expected to produce up to another 3 inches of rain in some areas, the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said.

A landslide buried a house in the town of Nexticapan, killing a 61-year-old woman and a 2-year-old girl and injuring two other people, said Aru Becerra, a spokeswoman for Civil Protection in Puebla, a state bordering the Mexican capital.

CBS News 2010 Storm Tracker

Out in the Atlantic, Hurricane Igor was on track to reach Bermuda on Sunday night. A hurricane warning was in effect, with significant coastal flooding and dangerous storm surge expected, along with between 5 and 8 inches of rain.

At 8:00 a.m. ET Igor was centered about 475 miles south of Bermuda, with top winds of 110 mph. Further strengthening is possible during the day.

Large swells will continue to affect the Leeward Islands, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Hispaniola and portions of the Bahamas during the next couple of days. The East Coast of the U.S. will likely experience large swells and life-threatening surf and rip currents.

Farther east over the Atlantic, Hurricane Julia weakened to a tropical storm, with winds decreasing to 60 mph Saturday.

Authorities across central Mexico prepared for possible flash floods and mudslides. Mexico City officials put hospitals on alert and sent workers to evaluate hillside neighborhoods and flood-risk zones.

Officials in the capital and nearby Cuernavaca put crews on alert and designated schools and other buildings as possible shelters. The Mexican capital was in a state of "blue alert," meaning the risk was considered moderate, city Civil Protection Secretary Elias Moreno said.

The storm had sustained winds of 115 mph when it hit land at midday about 10 miles northwest of Veracruz. Its winds were down to 25 mph by Saturday morning.

Karl knocked down trees, billboards and power poles in Veracruz, making some streets unusable, said the city's civil protection chief, Isidro Cano Luna. He said there had not been a storm like it since Hurricane Janet in 1955.

Veracruz state Gov. Fidel Herrera surveyed the heaviest damage in the coastal towns north of the port. Food huts along the beach were destroyed in the fishing town of Chachalaca. Ten homes collapsed or lost their roofs in Ursulo Galvan.

About 70 homes were flooded, and more than 22,000 people lost power, although electricity was restored to many neighborhoods within hours.

"We went through several hours of anxiety but also of organization, coordination," Herrera said. "Fortunately, we are all still here. The death toll (in the state) was zero. This was my biggest challenge yet as governor."

Local forecasters said the storm dumped 8 inches of rain in the city just in the first 90 minutes after arriving. Flights into Veracruz were canceled, and public transit was shut down.

A stretch of coastal road farther north in Nautla was washed out.

State oil company Petroleos Mexicanos closed 14 production wells in the northern part of Veracruz state and evacuated workers from some platforms in the Gulf.

Workers also were evacuated from the shuttered Laguna Verde nuclear power plant, Mexico's largest electricity producer, along with residents in the nearby town of Farallon and in the coastal towns of Cardel and Palma Sola.

The approach of the storm had Veracruz state jittery because about 80,000 people already had their homes damaged and nine people were killed in flooding from previous heavy rains in the southern part of the state since Aug. 19.

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