BISL 04-Weather and Climate

(yzsuai) #1

58 METEOROLOGICAL PHENOMENA


What Katrina Took Away


H

urricane Katrina lashed the south and the center of the United States
in August 2005. The force of the wind razed thousands of houses,
buildings, oil installations, highways, and bridges, leaving a vast area

of the country without communication and some heavily populated areas


without provisions. It resulted in extensive material damage and thousands


of deaths in Florida, the Bahamas, Louisiana, and Mississippi. Satellite images


reveal the scope of the disaster, considered one of the most devastating in


the history of the country.


The hurricane winds pushed the
water 14 feet (4.3 m) above the
normal sea level.

Along with the storm, the
backed-up water reaches the
dikes of the Mississippi River.

ORLEANS
AVENUE CANAL

17TH STREET
CANAL

OVER


OVER


Area most affected
by the flood

Areas most affected
by the flood

Area of New Orleans
affected by flooding

80%


LAKE PONTCHARTRAIN

THE WATER
advances toward the city,
invading the central regions.

6:00 A.M.
The time when
the hurricane
made landfall

NEW ORLEANS
Latitude 30° N
Longitude 90° W

Area
Number of inhabitants
Altitude (above sea level)

360 square miles (933 square kilometers)
500,000
10 feet (3 m)

THE WINDS
At 155 miles per hour (250
km/h), they force the water
against the protective walls..

DIKES
were breached by the
water and the wind,
causing a great flood.

Deaths confirmed after Katrina

1,500


dollars was the cost of the repairs.

75 billion


AUGUST 23
A tropical depression forms in the
Bahamas. It intensifies and becomes
tropical storm Katrina. On August
25, it makes landfall in Florida as a
category 1 hurricane.

AUGUST 27
Leaves the Gulf of Mexico and
reaches category 3. On August 28,
it is transformed from category 3
to category 5 and increases in size.

CATEGORY 3

CATEGORY 4

CATEGORY 5

AUGUST 29
In the early hours, it makes landfall in
Louisiana as a category 4 hurricane.
A little later, it makes landfall for the
third time, in Mississippi.

SEPTEMBER 1
What remains of the hurricane
is weakened as it moves north
to Canada, where it dissipates.

Direction of
the hurricane

MAXIMUM WIND SPEED

155


(250 km/h)


miles
per hour

of the inhabitants
of this zone were
evacuated.

75%


Huracanes fueron
14 registrados en 2005.

El total de tormentas
tropicales registradas
en el año 2005.

26


WEATHER AND CLIMATE 59


LONDON
AVENUE CANAL
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