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It's Raining Fish and Spiders

Page 6

by Bill Evans


  Rina

  Sam

  Shary

  Sean

  Teresa

  Tomas

  Tammy

  Victor

  Virginie

  Vince

  Wanda

  Walter

  Whitney

  * * *

  You Have Been Retired from the Game!

  Hurricanes that have a severe impact on people’s lives and are devastating to property and the economy become part of weather history, and are remembered for generations. When a storm of this magnitude occurs, any country affected by the storm can request that the storm’s name be retired by the World Meteorological Organization. Here is a list of major Atlantic and Caribbean hurricanes whose names will no longer be used.

  Hurricane Dennis

  NASA

  * * *

  Retired Names

  NAME

  YEAR

  Agnes

  1972

  Alicia

  1983

  Allen

  1980

  Allison

  2001

  Andrew

  1992

  Anita

  1977

  Audrey

  1957

  Betsy

  1965

  Beulah

  1967

  Bob

  1991

  Camille

  1969

  Carla

  1961

  Carmen

  1974

  Carol

  1954

  Celia

  1970

  Cesar

  1996

  Charley

  2004

  Cleo

  1964

  Connie

  1955

  David

  1979

  Dean

  2007

  Dennis

  2005

  Diana

  1990

  Diane

  1955

  Donna

  1960

  Dora

  1964

  Edna

  1968

  Elena

  1985

  Eloise

  1975

  Fabian

  2003

  Felix

  2007

  Fifi

  1974

  Flora

  1963

  Floyd

  1999

  Fran

  1996

  Frances

  2004

  Frederic

  1979

  Georges

  1998

  Gilbert

  1988

  Gloria

  1985

  Gustav

  2008

  Hattie

  1961

  Hazel

  1954

  Hilda

  1964

  Hortense

  1996

  Hugo

  1989

  Ike

  2008

  Inez

  1966

  Ione

  1955

  Iris

  2001

  Isabel

  2003

  Isidore

  2002

  Ivan

  2004

  Janet

  1955

  Jeanne

  2004

  Joan

  1988

  Juan

  2003

  Katrina

  2005

  Keith

  2000

  Klaus

  1990

  Lenny

  1999

  Lili

  2002

  Luis

  1995

  Marilyn

  1995

  Michelle

  2001

  Mitch

  1998

  Noel

  2007

  Opal

  1995

  Paloma

  2008

  Rita

  2005

  Roxanne

  1995

  Stan

  2005

  Wilma

  2005

  * * *

  Hurricane Katrina

  NASA

  The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale

  I’m sure you’ve heard of hurricanes being rated on some sort of scale. You hear people say, “That storm is a 1,” or “That one is a Category 2,” and so on. Those numbers are from the Saffir-Simpson Scale. This scale was formulated in 1969, after Hurricane Camille slaughtered the Mississippi Gulf Coast. The damage from that hurricane was quite shocking, at least in part because there was, at that time, no way to predict a storm’s potential impact. The population had no sense of what to expect from a hurricane of Camille’s mammoth strength and size.

  National Hurricane Center, National Weather Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/Department of Commerce

  Dr. Robert Simpson, who at the time was director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami, realized the need to help disaster agencies better understand how much damage a particular storm might cause. So he called on Herbert Saffir, a consulting engineer who, Simpson says, was “well known as the father of the Miami building code.” Simpson handled the meteorology part, and Saffir the engineering part, of developing a new hurricane damage assessment tool.

  The two came up with the Saffir-Simpson Damage-Potential Scale, which assigns each hurricane a rating, from 1 to 5, based on the storm’s intensity. This scale is used to estimate the potential property damage and flooding expected along the coast from a hurricane landfall. Wind speed is the only determining factor in the scale; after all, projecting storm surge heights are difficult due to the varied slope of the continental shelf and the shape of the coastline in the area where the hurricane makes landfall.

  CATEGORY 1 HURRICANE

  Winds 74 to 95 mph (64 to 83 kt). This is a minimal hurricane that brings a small storm surge, generally 4 to 5 feet above normal. However, this relatively small surge should not be taken lightly, as the time of the storm’s arrival and the shape of the coastline are major factors. For example, if the storm arrives at high tide, then the surge will be higher.

  There’s little chance of serious damage to buildings in a storm this size. However, there will be some damage to various sorts of structures, especially unanchored mobile homes, and shrubbery and trees, which take a beating. Signs will be blown down as well as some power lines. At the beach or along the coast there will be some flooding of roads and minor damage to piers.

  CATEGORY 2 HURRICANE

  Winds 96 to 110 mph (83 to 96 kt). This is where you begin to see significant damage to the roofs, doors, and windows of buildings. There’s also considerable damage to mobile homes, piers, and to poorly constructed signs on buildings and along roads. The storm surge can be as high as 5 to 10 feet at the normal high tide. Coastal roads and escape routes flood 2 to 4 hours before the arrival of the hurricane’s center. Small boats in unprotected anchorages break their moorings and go flying.

  CATEGORY 3 HURRICANE

  Winds 111 to 130 mph (96 to 113 kt). Once a storm becomes a Category 3, it is considered major. The storm surge is generally 9 to 12 feet above normal with structural damage to residences and other buildings. Mobile homes and most signs are destroyed. Many plants are stripped of their foliage and even large trees are blown down.

  Low-lying roads and evacuation routes are cut by rising water 3 to 5 hours before arrival of the center of the hurricane. Flooding near the coast destroys smaller homes and buildings; larger structures are damaged, battered by floating debris. Areas where the land is lower than 5 feet above mean sea level may be flooded for 8 miles or more inland. Residents in these areas will have to be evacuated, especially those within several blocks of the shoreline.

  A flooded forest after a storm

  Mike Irwin; used by permission.

  CATEGORY 4 HURRICANE

  Winds 131 to 155 mph (114 to 135 kt). At this point, the storm surge is generally 13 t
o 18 feet above normal! There’s more extensive destruction with some complete roof structure failures on small residences. There’s complete destruction of mobile homes and extensive damage to doors and windows of permanent structures. Major damage occurs to lower floors of structures near the shore. Shrubs, trees, and all signs are blown down.

  Low-lying escape routes may be cut by rising water 3 to 5 hours before the arrival of the center of the hurricane. Any area of land lower than 10 feet above sea level may be flooded, requiring massive evacuation of residential areas as far inland as 6 miles!

  Category 5 Hurricane

  Winds greater than 155 mph (135 kt). Whoa! This is the top of the scale! The storm surge is generally greater than 18 feet above normal. Roofs on nearly all residences and industrial buildings will be completely destroyed. Larger structures will be shattered while smaller ones will be blown away. Your mobile home is gone!

  There will be severe and extensive window and door damage to inland homes and buildings. There’s also major damage to the lower floors of all buildings located less than 15 feet above sea level and within 500 yards of the shoreline. All shrubs, trees, and signs will be blown down.

  Low-lying escape routes are cut by rising water 3 to 5 hours before the arrival of the center of the hurricane. There will be massive evacuation of residential areas on low ground within 5 to 10 miles of the shoreline.

  Only three Category 5 hurricanes have made landfall in the United States since records began: the Labor Day Hurricane of 1935 (remember, the naming of hurricanes did not begin until the 1940s), Hurricane Camille in 1969, and Hurricane Andrew in August 1992. The 1935 Labor Day Hurricane struck the Florida Keys with a minimum barometric pressure of 892 millibars (mb)—the lowest pressure of a hurricane at landfall ever observed in the United States. The lower the pressure, the stronger and nastier the storm will be.

  When Hurricane Camille struck the Mississippi Gulf Coast, it caused a 25-foot storm surge, which inundated Pass Christian. Hurricane Katrina, a Category 5 storm over the Gulf of Mexico, was responsible for at least 81 billion dollars of property damage when it struck the Gulf Coast as a Category 3. Katrina is by far the costliest hurricane to ever strike the United States.

  Hurricane Wilma of 2005 was a Category 5 hurricane at its peak intensity. Wilma is the strongest Atlantic tropical cyclone on record, with a minimum pressure of 882 mb. Fortunately, it did not make landfall at peak intensity! Wilma was a Category 3 as the time of her landfall.

  Hurricane Katrina

  NASA

  * * *

  Deadliest Tropical Storms in U.S. History, Resulting in Fifty or More Deaths

  DEATHS

  LOCATION

  DATE

  8,000+

  Galveston, T X

  September 1900

  2,500+

  Lake Okeechobee, FL

  September 1928

  1,000–2,500

  SC, GA

  August 1893

  1,800–2,000

  Coastal LA and MS

  October 1896

  1,836

  (Hurricane Katrina) LA, MS

  August 2005

  700+

  GA, SC

  August 1881

  638

  New England

  September 1938

  600+

  Florida (marine)

  September 1919

  500+

  GA, SC

  September 1804

  450+

  Corpus Christi, T X

  September 1919

  424

  NC Capes (marine)

  September 1857

  408

  Florida Keys

  September 1935

  400

  Île Dernière, LA

  August 1856

  390

  New England

  September 1944

  390

  (Hurricane Audrey) west LA

  June 1957

  350+

  Grand Isle, LA

  September 1909

  300

  South Carolina

  September 1922

  275

  New Orleans, LA

  September 1915

  275

  Upper coast of Texas

  August 1925

  256

  (Hurricane Camille) MS, V A

  August 1

  243

  Florida

  September 1926

  184

  (Hurricane Diane) NC to ME

  September 1955

  179

  Georgia coast

  October 1898

  176

  Indianola, T X

  September 1875

  164

  Southeast Florida

  October 1906

  134

  FL, AL, and MS

  September 1906

  122

  (Tropical Storm Agnes) PA, NY

  June 1972

  100+

  Sabine, T X

  October 1886

  100

  Florida

  September 1896

  95

  (Hurricane Hazel) NY, NJ

  October 1954

  90+

  SC, NC (marine)

  October 1837

  75

  Hurricane Betsy (FL, LA)

  September 1965

  70

  Brownsville, T X

  August 1844

  68

  Florida

  October 1896

  60

  (Hurricane Carol) MA, ME

  August 1954

  57

  (Hurricane Hugo) SC, NC

  September 1989

  53

  (Hurricane Floyd) NC to NJ

  September 1999

  52

  (Hurricane Ivan) AL, FL

  September 2004

  51

  San Antonio, T X

  September 1921

  51

  Southeast Florida, LA, MS

  September 1947

  50

  South Florida

  November 1925

  * * *

  * * *

  Costliest Hurricanes

  * * *

  * * *

  East Coast Hurricanes—Highest Wind Speeds in Atlantic Tropical Storms

  * * *

  The Most Extreme Wind Anywhere in the World!

  A wind gust of 190 mph was measured by the weather station on the island of Miyako-jima in the Ryukyu Islands chain on September 5, 1966. This is the highest wind speed ever measured in a tropical storm anywhere in the world!

  Pacific Hurricanes

  Atlantic Ocean hurricanes affect the Caribbean, the Gulf of Mexico, and the eastern coast of the United States, whereas Pacific hurricanes affect the western coast of the United States and Mexico, the Far East (the eastern edge of China, plus Japan, Taiwan, and all other nations with coastlines along the Pacific Ocean), and islands in the Pacific, like Hawaii. In the Far East, hurricanes are called typhoons; Australians like to call them “willy-willies.”

  The Pacific hurricane/typhoon seasons are May 15 to November 30 for the eastern Pacific (western Mexico, Baja California, California, Oregon, Washington, British Columbia, Alaska, Russia); June 1 to November 30 for the central Pacific (western Mexico, western Latin America, Hawaii, Polynesia, Micronesia, and central Pacific islands); October 15 to May 15 for the southwest Pacific/Australian basin; and year-round for the northwest Pacific basin.

  Eastern Pacific storms originate just north of the equator, off the western coasts of Mexico and Central America, in places where the water reaches temperatures of 80ºF or more. These hurricanes then move north to northwest, into the central Pacific. While a hurricane proper has never hit the coast of California, remnants of hurricanes have. Most hurricanes weaken as they near the California coast because the water temperature there is 60ºF (156ºC) year-round, which weakens the storms considerably.

  * * *

  The Tops in Centr
al Pacific Hurricanes

  STRENGTH

  NAME

  DATE

  Category 5 (173 miles/150 kt)

  John

  August 1994

  Category 5 (173 miles/150 kt)

  Patsy

  September 1959

  Category 5 (161 miles/140 kt)

  Ioke

  August 2006

  Category 5 (161 miles/140 kt)

  Emilia

  July 1994

  Category 5 (161 miles/140 kt)

  Gilma

  July 1994

  Category 4 (144 miles/125 kt)

 

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