Q1: Week 3- Hurricane Katrina
Hurricane Katrina was one of the top five most destructive, harmful, and costly hurricanes to hit the United States. This hurricane was a category 5 which meant it had the most forceful winds. Katrina cost the United States about $108 billion dollars and killed over 1,800 people. The hurricane traveled from southeastern to central Bahamas, then when it first made landfall it was in southeastern Florida as a category 1 hurricane. Katrina transitioned to a category 5 hurricane when it went into the Gulf of Mexico. When Katrina made landfall in southeastern Louisiana and then once again along the Mississippi Gulf Coast, its intensity lowered to a category 3 hurricane.
New Orleans was left with massive damage from Hurricane Katrina due to breaks in the levee separating New Orleans from Lake Pontchartrain. By August 31st, when the hurricane was coming to an end, New Orleans was left almost completely under water by about 80%. The highest surge from Katrina was near Bay St. Louis, MS. Also, the storm surges from Katrina along the Mississippi-Alabama border was close to 20 feet high. The winds near Grand Isle, LA were the fastest with the wind speed up to 140mph.
https://www.weather.gov/mob/katrina
New Orleans was left with massive damage from Hurricane Katrina due to breaks in the levee separating New Orleans from Lake Pontchartrain. By August 31st, when the hurricane was coming to an end, New Orleans was left almost completely under water by about 80%. The highest surge from Katrina was near Bay St. Louis, MS. Also, the storm surges from Katrina along the Mississippi-Alabama border was close to 20 feet high. The winds near Grand Isle, LA were the fastest with the wind speed up to 140mph.
https://www.weather.gov/mob/katrina
Seems really scary! It was unfortunate that New Orleans got hit so bad.
ReplyDeleteWas any of this any of this information new to you? I did not know 1,800 people died during that storm!
ReplyDeleteI like how you described where it came from and how it got to New Orleans. I didn't know it was from the Bahamas.
ReplyDeleteI liked how you described the amount of people and where the storm came from.
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