Hurricane Hugo lasted 15 days and was a category type 5 hurricane it had winds up to 162 mph. Hurricane Hugo hit North Carolina and many other locations. The hurricane was a Cape Verde-type hurricane and did a lot of destruction. Hurricane Hugo made damage to tropical rain forests in many places including Puerto Rico. The eye of Hurricane Hugo was up to a diameter of 30 miles. Hurricane Hugo left 8 tree species out of 36 that used to be in the Bisley Watersheds. Hurricane Hugo had one of the most highest tides recorded they were up to 6.1 meters =20 ft.
Over the past decade, the world has experienced more natural disaster than people can count. Floods, mudslides, earthquakes, and raging fires are just a few of the events that have stripped people away from their families, homes, and possessions. The deadliest of these natural disasters are hurricanes. Extremely strong winds mixed with large waves can cause enormous damage, taking months, even years for towns to recover. Hurricane Katrina left millions of people without homes and families torn apart. Hurricane Sandy demolished the Jersey coast, leaving years of repair work behind. The most recent and powerful hurricane that surfaced is Hurricane Maria. A level five hurricane, Hurricane Maria ripped straight through the United States territory of Puerto Rico. The island lost power, supplies
I have always found the ocean to be a very intriguing part of the Earth. There are infinitely many discoveries that have yet to be made about it. My fascination with the ocean sparked the idea to do my class paper on hurricanes and what they are along with their effects. I remember hearing about all the damages from Hurricane Katrina after it hit the coast near New Orleans. The only information I really know about them is what is briefly covered on the news. I thought it would be interesting to discover the true effects they can have on not only people that endure them, but also the environment as it gets ripped to shreds by the plethora of winds and water.
When most people think the of the Gulf of Mexico, the thought of surf probably never crosses their mind. However, the gulf is capable of producing quality surf more than you would think. From hurricanes to cold fronts, the gulf can receive waves from various weather patterns.
Hugo quickly strengthened into a category five hurricane with sustained winds of 160 mph. Eventually it lost it strengthen when passing through the high terrain of Puerto Rico. Then the unpredictable event happens, when the eye of the hurricane wasn’t visible for about a day. By September 20th the eye was once again visible and the hurricane was better organized with the help of the warm water of the Western Atlantic Ocean between
The 1964 Atlantic hurricane season featured Hurricane Dora, the most recent landfalling hurricane along the First Coast of Florida. The season officially began on June 15, and lasted until November 30. These dates conventionally delimit the period of each year when most tropical cyclones form in the Atlantic basin. The season was slightly above average, with twelve total storms and six hurricanes. All of the hurricanes strengthened into major hurricanes, which had not occurred since 1930. The first system, an unnamed tropical storm, developed on June 2, almost two weeks before the official start of the season. Striking Florida on June 6, the storm brought localized flooding to portions of Cuba and the Southeastern United States, leaving about $1 million in damage. The next storm, also unnamed, developed near the end of July; it did not impact land.
Hurricane Andrew is a storm that destroyed South Florida, and the Bahamas, and ripped through Louisiana, costing as much as 26 billion dollars.
Category 5 hurricanes are the highest level of impact and size a hurricane can be; therefore they can be very catastrophic and one must prepare (especially when you live in Florida). There are many ways you can prepare efficiently for a hurricane, even if you can not accurately predict when, where, or how hard it will hit.
It was one fairly sunny day in Houston Texas It started to get windy then it started to rain. All of a sudden it started to storm hard then the wind got stronger all of a sudden it started pouring people that were watching the news had alarms going off. And then the storm sirens started to go then the people of houston knew they were in trouble now people and families were scared the storm was horrible the people of houston knew it was a hurricane. The storm lasted around five hours.
Do you think hurricanes are nothing compared to tornadoes? The Hurricane of 1938 was a catastrophic disaster that New England was not prepared for. The New Englanders were just going about business as usual and once the storm hit without warning, no one was prepared. The hurricane caused very high waves, destruction of property, and flooding.
After personally experiencing the effects of Hurricane Wilma, Jacqueline Bogues an Independent All-Lines Adjuster earned her Certification in 2005 at Broward College. She is currently associated with various insurance carriers both locally and worldwide.
When a disaster strikes and it is so sever that the local governments and the State governments together cannot provide the needed resources, the federal government then becomes the source for resources. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is the Federal agency that coordinates the activation of the Federal Response Plan (FRP). However, due to past hurricanes and incidents, the response of FEMA has demonstrated that the government is not prepared to defend the US population as a whole. As demonstrated on Wednesday October 19, 2005, Hurricane Wilma intensified into a Category 5 hurricane within a 24 hours time frame. Hurricane Wilma produced sustained winds of over 173 miles per hour and with the atmospheric pressure of 882 millibars,
Hurricane Hugo, based on the recording of National Weather Service, developed from a tropical wave which moved westward off the African coast on September 9, 1989, and it first landed on American territory in the Caribbean. However, it did not stopped its path in the Caribbean, it struck the South Carolina on September 22 and then North Carolina.
The restoration of areas affected by hurricane Hazel was very costly. In North America relief organizations quickly got shelter, food and other essentials for everyone who was left homeless or affected. The Hurricane Relief Fund collected donations from around the world to help restore the areas. This money did a number things like providing support for people left with nothing, to organize funerals for the deceased and to rebuild farms, bridges, businesses, homes, schools and more. North America received much support from around the world and the areas were quite quickly restored. Haiti on the other hand had very slow recovery being a poor country. It took a long time for the area and economy to be restored again.
The great hurricane of 1938 was one of the most destructive hurricanes to reach New England with winds over 100 mph. Human error, weather conditions led to the mass destruction and devastation caused by this hurricane.
Have you ever experienced a huge storm that caused the loss of many peoples' lives? Hurricane Camille, a category five storm on the Gulf Coast of the United States, caused damage of $1.42 billion, mass evacuations, and took many peoples’ lives. Camille caused more than 200 deaths and billions of dollars' worth of damage, after this chaotic storm, it was called the greatest catastrophe ever to strike the United States and the most significant economic event in worlds history.