1 / 41

Hurricane Case Studies

Hurricane Case Studies. Outline. North Atlantic Caribbean Gulf of Mexico Atlantic Coast Pacific Bangladesh. North Atlantic-Caribbean-Gulf of Mexico. ~4-20 tropical storms/hurricanes each year Tend to form in late summer (highest sea temps). # hurricanes 1931-1980.

wilsont
Download Presentation

Hurricane Case Studies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hurricane Case Studies

  2. Outline • North Atlantic • Caribbean • Gulf of Mexico • Atlantic Coast • Pacific • Bangladesh

  3. North Atlantic-Caribbean-Gulf of Mexico • ~4-20 tropical storms/hurricanes each year • Tend to form in late summer (highest sea temps) # hurricanes 1931-1980

  4. North Atlantic-Caribbean-Gulf of Mexico

  5. North Atlantic-Caribbean-Gulf of Mexico • 2 main locations for origin • Western Africa (Cape Verde type) • Caribbean sea

  6. Cape Verde Type • Start at low pressure systems in western Africa, hit warm water off coast

  7. Cape Verde Type • Strengthen over warm water, move W/NW because of trade winds, Coriolis force • Bermuda High: commonly observed pressure system affects path • Small: storms go north • Big: can push storms into Florida, up East Coast

  8. Example: Andrew 1992 • Most destructive (costly) in U.S. history • $30 billion damage • 3rd strongest in 20th century

  9. Andrew 1992 • Hit S. Florida first • 33 dead • 80,000 buildings destroyed • Trees, cars demolished • Moved into Gulf of Mexico • Picked up strength with warm water • Hit LA • 15 dead, significant environmental impacts • Heavy rain in MS

  10. Radar image at landfall Time lapse satellite image over 3 days of Andrew moving west to east

  11. Caribbean Sea • Form in very warm water • Convergence zone of trade winds at equator • Important because convergence means low pressure, tropical depression can form

  12. Example: Mitch 1998

  13. Mitch 1998 • Began in Caribbean Sea • Formed quickly to Category 5 hurricane • Stayed that way for 33 hours • Headed towards Central America, but stalled • Stayed offshore for 2 days, weakened • Good: didn’t hit coast of Honduras with full force • Bad: dumped 2-6 ft of rain

  14. Results of Mitch 1998 • Honduras • 6500 fatalities • 20% population homeless • 60% roads/bridges destroyed • Nicaragua • 3800 fatalities • Lahars from flooding of volcanic lake • Moved out to Gulf, hit S. Florida on to north of England • Total: 11,000 fatalities

  15. Flooding and road damage in Nicaragua

  16. Gulf of Mexico Hurricanes • Along coast: low elevation land • Along TX coastline, almost 6000 mi2 is less than 20 ft above sea level • Significant problem for storm surges

  17. Galveston, 1900 • Deadliest natural disaster in U.S. history • Town on low-lying island in front of bay • Category 4 storm hit; flooded island several ft • Storm waves, wind destroyed 3600 buildings • Bridges washed out • Over 7000 fatalities (roughly 1 in 6 residents)

  18. Atlantic Coast - Hugo 1989 • Category 4 storm • 17 ft surge in Ft. Sumter, SC • Moved into NC, WV, OH, PA, NY, Canada as rain • Only 11 fatalities

  19. 2004 Events • 15 tropical storms in North Atlantic during the 2004 hurricane season. • Nine of these became hurricanes • six becoming major hurricanes (Category 3+) • Ivan strongest (Category 5)

  20. 2004 Storms • http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2004/hurricanes/interactive/hurricane.paths/index.html 2004 was predicted to be an “active” season with 12-15 tropical storms FEMA distributed a record $4.85 billion in hurricane relief in 2004 4 hurricanes hit Florida, a record for the state 1 in 5 homes in Florida damaged 117 fatalities in FL alone

  21. Hurricane Charley • Landfall near Ft. Myers, FL as Cat. 4 storm on Aug 13th • 16 fatalties, 2 million lost power • Damage likely ~$10 billion • Made 2nd landfall along S.Carolina • Maintained tropical storm force winds through New England (few inches of rain there)

  22. Charley

  23. Hurricane Frances • Reached Cat. 4 status over Bahamas (Aug 28) • Hit east coast of Florida as Cat. 2 (Sept5), traveled over state, made 2nd landfall on panhandle as tropical storm • Traveled north, dropping heavy rains • Quebec got over 8 inches of rain! • Also spawned 117 tornadoes • 23 fatalities

  24. Hurricane Frances

  25. Hurricane Ivan • Category 5 storm over Grenada, Cayman Islands (Sept 7-9) • Landfall as Cat. 3 in Alabama • Wacky path - went northeast, then back southwest to cross Florida, Gulf of Mexico on Sept 21 (strengthened back to tropical storm), 2nd landfall in LA on 24th • Significant rain, flooding (U.S. deaths ~50, more across the Caribbean)

  26. Hurricane Ivan

  27. Hurricane Jeanne • Formed on Sept. 13, weakened by Sept. 18th, strengthened by 19th and headed out to sea, turned back towards U.S. by 24th • Significant fatalities in Haiti (over 3000) from flooding and mudslides • Landfall in U.S. in FL as Cat. 3 on Sept 26th (almost same location as Frances) • Tracked into mid-Atlantic states • Flooding, 10 fatalities in US

  28. Pacific Coast • ~15% of events form in Pacific offshore Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador • Less hit land than Atlantic hurricanes • Why? • Trade winds push westward, away from land • Colder water in Pacific reduces potential (California current brings cold water from Alaska)

  29. Pauline, 1997 • Category 4 storm • Main problem: rain caused flooding and debris flows

  30. Iniki, 1992 • Category 4 storm hit Kauai, HI • Significant building damage $2 billion

  31. Bangladesh • Cyclones in this area: Most deadly events • Densely populated area on low-lying deltas • 35% of country is < 20 ft elevation • In average year, 20% is flooded • Cyclones are common • ~5/year

  32. Bangladesh • 1970 ~category 5 storm 400,000 fatalities • 1991 140,000 fatalities, 10 million homeless • Population expected to double in next 30 years!

  33. Next Time • Coastal Hazards

More Related