Facts
about Hurricane Katrina
Hurricane Katrina was the
costliest U.S. hurricane on record and one of the worst natural disasters in U.
S. history. Hurricane Katrina will be remembered for its catastrophic flooding
in New Orleans due to levee failure.
Katrina formed in the central Bahamas and
moved northwest. It made landfall in south Florida on the Broward/Miami-Dade
counties line as a category 1 hurricane. Virginia Key reported a gust to 93
mph. Heavy rain also fell. Key West had 10.05" and Homested 14.04".
As Hurricane Katrina moved over the Gulf of Mexico, it turned north and
strengthened into a category 5 hurricane with top sustained winds of 175 mph.
Katrina was large in size and gererated a large wind field. This created huge
waves in the Gulf Of Mexico where a buoy 74 miles south of Dauphin Island, AL
measured a peak significant wave height of 55 feet. Katrina ingested some dry
air and weakened into a category 3 hurricane as it made landfall near Buras,
LA. It briefly passed over the Gulf of Mexico waters again and made its last landfall
on the Mississippi - Louisiana border. In Louisiana, a storm surge of 11.8 feet
was measured at New Orleans Lakefront airport. New Orleans International
airport had a peak gust to 98 mph. New Orlean's wind damage was comparable only
to a category 1 or 2 hurricane. The majority of the damage in New Orleans was
due to levee failure. Up to 80% of the city of New Orleans was flooded with up
to 20 feet of water. The Mississippi coast suffered catastrophic damage due to
storm surge and wind damage. A surge of 24-28 feet was measured along the
Mississippi coast with the highest near Pass Christian at 27.8 feet. The storm
surge went inland for about six miles, but up to twelve miles along the rivers.
Pearl River EOC at Poplarville recorded a wind gust to 135 mph. In all, total
damage estimates were placed near $81 billion.
Hurricane
Katrina Facts Summary
Hurricane
Katrina Facts: Lowest
pressure: 902 millibars / 26.64 inches
Hurricane
Katrina Facts: Sixth
strongest hurricane ever measured by pressure in the Atlantic basin.
Hurricane
Katrina Facts: Third
strongest hurricane ever to make a U.S. landfall measured by pressure.
Hurricane
Katrina Facts: Pressure
and sustained wind at landfall: (Broward/Miami-Dade county line) 984 millibars
/ 80 mph
Hurricane
Katrina Facts: Pressure
and sustained wind at landfall: (Buras, LA) 920 millibars / 125 mph
Hurricane
Katrina Facts: Pressure
and sustained wind at landfall: (LA-MS border) 928 millibars / 120 mph
Hurricane
Katrina Facts: Maximum
sustained winds at peak: 175 mph
Hurricane
Katrina Facts: Fatalities:
1833
Hurricane
Katrina Facts: Storm
surge height: 27.8 feet, Pass Christian, MS
Hurricane
Katrina Facts: Up
to 80% of New Orleans was under water from flooding.
Hurricane
Katrina Facts: Hurricane
Katrina began as a tropical depression near the southeastern Bahamas
Hurricane
Katrina Facts: Hurricane
Katrina weakened and became extratropical in the Ohio Valley.
Source:TropicalWeather.net
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