Hurricane Katrina By Willow Harris
Thesis Statement: Hurricanes happen every so often and cause many people to lose their home or loved ones. Hurricanes have the ability to affect the spheres of the Earth. One of the most memorable hurricanes is hurricane Katrina. Hurricane Katrina happened in 2005 and hit the Gulf Coast and New Orleans. It damaged forests and gave tons of people anxieties about global warming. Our goal today is to find how hurricane katrina affected each sphere.
Recommendations: If a hurricane happens near you, you should stay indoors and away from any doors or windows. Listen the TV or radio for instructions and to be told when the storm has passed. Close all interior doors. Try to stay on the bottom floor in a small room or a closet. Go under a table or some other sturdy object.
ESS Analysis: (in this analysis, E=event, A=atmosphere, B=biosphere, H=hydrosphere, An=anthrosphere, and G=geosphere)
A>E
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This caused a large carbon dioxide release into the atmosphere as all of the trees storing it that died will release it. The study's lead author Jeffrey Chambers, a biologist at Tulane University in New Orleans, La says that, “The loss of so many trees will cause these forests to be a net source of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere for years to come. If, as many believe, a warming climate causes a rise in the intensity of extreme events like Hurricane Katrina, we're likely to see an increase in tree mortality, resulting in an elevated release of carbon by impacted forest
Lastly, there are many ways to be prepared for hurricanes. Here are some tips on being prepared for during a hurricane. To stay informed, keep a radio near or go into a safe room with television, take shelter in a small interior room, closet, or a hallway that is on the lowest level, find a sturdy table and lie under it. Although, try to be prepared before a hurricane. Trim the trees around your home so they do not do as much damage as a giant tree would do, secure your home and property, have the curtains and blinds kept closed. Those were some of the survival tips about how to survive a hurricane.
Hurricane Katrina was one of the deadliest hurricanes ever to hit the United States. Hurricane Katrina started out as any other hurricane, as the result of warm moisture and air from the oceans surface that built into storm clouds and pushed around by strong forceful winds until it became a powerful storm. Hurricane Katrina formed over the Bahamas on August 23, 2005 and crossed southern Florida as a moderate Category 1 hurricane, causing some deaths and flooding there before strengthening rapidly in the Gulf of Mexico. The hurricane strengthened to a Category 5 hurricane over the warm Gulf water, but weakened before making its second landfall as a Category 3 hurricane on the morning of Monday, August 29 in southeast
Katrina went to college at the University of Florida. Her professors told her that she had “a way with words.” So then she began to dream about becoming a writer, telling stories for a living was what she wanted. Katrina wandered around from job to job. Such as selling tickets at Circus World, planting philodendrons in a greenhouse, calling bingo at a campground, running rides at an amusement park -- and the whole time, she talked incessantly about being a writer and reading books. At the age of 29 Katrina had an epiphany. She realized that she could spend all her life dreaming or she could follow her dream. So Katrina thought very seriously about what it takes to be a writer. She came to a conclusion the one thing that is required is writing.
Hurricane Katrina was one of the deadliest and costliest hurricanes to hit the United States in decades. The economic losses were extraordinary; however, it was the human losses that stuck Americans at their core. The media brought into our homes graphic images of the destruction of New Orleans. Its mayor had ordered a mandatory evacuation of the city and yet 150,000 citizens are said to have stayed. Like most of the nation I asked myself, “Well why did they stay? If a mandatory evacuation is issued, it stands to reason that state officials considered the situation to be precarious.” It is only recently, when I’ve seen reports of New Orleans slow rebuilding, that I have really given thought to the undisclosed factors that lead to such
I agree evacuation of locations that were in the path of the storm should have been immediate and mandatory. Tracking of the storm was being done and the knowledge of the severity of the storm was known, but the attempts to evacuate homes endangered of being hit by the storm was not order out of their residents. Mistakes were made on all level and these mistake led to many lives being lost. The magnitude of the storm should have been taken serious, because you know the say, ‘by failing to prepare, you are preparing to fail” and this clearly the issue during the Katrina disaster.
Hurricane Katrina was one of the most destructive hurricanes to ever hit the United States, causing damage across the entire Southeast, with the harshest conditions falling on the city of New Orleans. This hurricane began as the consequence of a tropical wave encountering the traces of an earlier tropical depression in the Gulf of Mexico. Once the wave and depression interacted, a new depression formed, located right near the Bahamas. This depression intensified exponentially, developing into a complete hurricane. Katrina wreaked havoc for slightly less than a week before subsiding over the eastern Great Lakes. This hurricane had catastrophic social and economic effects on the Southeast requiring a lengthy reconstruction period.
Hurricane Katrina hit the southern coast of the United States on August 28, 2005. The center of Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans on the morning of August 29, 2005. The devastating effect of this hurricane resulted in more than 1,800 citizens losing their lives, as well as more than an estimated $81 billion dollars in damages occurred. By August 31, 2005, eighty-percent of the city became submerged under water because the storm surge breached the city's levees at multiple points. If the levees are damaged massive water will flood Louisiana from the Gulf Coast, the Mississippi River, and other surrounding bodies of water. Some areas of New Orleans were 15 feet under water. Winds of Hurricane Katrina reached an astounding category 3 as
Even though it is the responsibility of the federal and state governments to aid citizens during times of disaster, the people devastated by Hurricane Katrina were not effectively facilitated as according to their rights as citizens of the United States. The government’s failures to deliver assistance to citizens stem from inadequate protection systems in place before the storm even struck. The Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Department of Homeland Security were the two largest incumbents in the wake of the storm. The failure of these agencies rests on the shoulders of those chosen to head the agency. These directors, appointed by then president George W. Bush, were not capable of leading large government agencies through a
Disastrous. Unstoppable. Saddening. These are some of the words that come to mind when describing the the eleventh named storm that hit The Big Easy on August 23, 2015. This named storm is better known as Hurricane Katrina. The damages that Hurricane Katrina still sit very well with the people that experienced the storm first hand. Personally I have never been to New Orleans, I have no family members or friends at all down south and although I am not very familiar with the south region of the UNited States at all that does not mean that exploring the effects that the hurricane caused can’t be underlined through climate change, but that is a topic for another time that will come later on in this paper.
Natural disasters can bring communities together, even if they have been torn apart. One morning, residents of New Orleans emerged from various shelters and their homes to examine the remnants of Hurricane Katrina. Several hours later, they realized there was more devastation awaiting them. Hours later, “…a breach in the levees allowed water to continue to rise until whole neighborhoods were flooded.” Hurricane Katrina brought great attention to the lack of local and disaster relief programs. Most programs are not designed or funded to help assist people for more than four or five weeks. When federal assistance money (FEMA) started to run out, the people were expected to find jobs or get help from other government agencies. This only caused
Stay inside and go where there are no windows are. Find a basement or closet to stay in with no windows. If there is a flood turn off power at main breaker or if you do not want to I would go out of the storm where it is safe.
Setting aside the philosophical and legal issues this case raises, what are the management or efficiency arguments for and against a more centralized response to large national disasters like Hurricane Katrina?
Hurricane Katrina was one of the most “destructive storms ever to strike the United States”. In August 2005, the hurricane started off as a tropical storm in the Caribbean Sea. Then it picked up speed and hit Florida in the Gulf of Mexico and made landfall near the Louisiana and Mississippi border on Aug. 29, 2005. The hurricane brought lots of winds, huge waves, and a lot of flooding that caused a lot of damage in Florida and widespread destruction in parts of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. The storm killed approximately 1,800 people, and caused about 100 billion dollars in damage.It left hundreds of thousands of people homeless. New Orleans, which lies below sea level, suffered some of the worst damage out of all the states that were
And if you have any pets try to look for hotels that accept pets. As stated in “How to be prepared for a hurricane” it says Make sure your vehicle is maintained. Check and replenish all fluids, replace the windshield wipers if possible, check your tire pressure, fill the gas tank and any reserve canisters. Remove any unnecessary external accessories, such as bike racks. Have a spare tire in good working order and lots more.if you evacuating u also want to know where and how you're going to get where you have to
Hurricane Katrina will always be remembered for the devastation it caused, my close friends, the Adams family knows this better than anyone else. My family has been close friends with the Adams for nearly my whole life, the thing that stood out about them the most was their passion to help others and their obsession for the New Orleans Saints. The Adams have numerous relatives who live in Louisiana, including their parents on the father’s side. The parents live just twenty minutes south of New Orleans on a small farm. During Hurricane Katrina, when the levees were breached, water flooded the town and their farm. They lost what few livestock they owned and their home was damaged beyond repair due to the high flood waters. The couple had to seek shelter on their roof until help could arrive. Meanwhile, the Adams family had no way of contacting them to ensure that they were alright and worried for almost a week. Finally, almost a week had passed before the parents were able to contact our friends, the Adams. After the parents were rescued from the roof of their flooded house, they were taken to the Superdome that housed thousands of other helpless victims. The only reason the parents had chosen not to evacuate the city like most other residents is because they both had survived Hurricane Camille in 1969 and Hurricane Andrew in 1992 with minor damage. Also the parents could not bear to abandon their livestock, which was their main source of income. After staying in the Superdome