| EES
Home
About EES
News
Faculty
Courses
Degree Requirements
Student Research
Faculty Research
Student Activities
Facilities
Careers in EES
The Sciences at Susquehanna
School of Natural and Social Sciences
Admissions Office
SU Main Page
|
|
HURRICANE KATRINA

The above image shows Hurricane Katrina in the Gulf of Mexico, prior
to making landfall along the Louisiana/Mississippi coast on August
29, 2005.
How do hurricanes form?
- Many hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean begin as a large complex of
thunderstorms over tropical Africa called a mesoscale convective
system (MCS).
- Once a storm moves westward into the Atlantic, it may begin to
rotate and become more organized. At this stage, the storm is called
a tropical depression. When the storm’s wind
speed reaches 39 mph, it becomes a tropical storm,
and is given a name (like “Katrina”). A hurricane
has wind speeds greater than 74 mph. Hurricanes are classified into
categories, from Category 1 (74-95 mph) to Category 5 (>155 mph).
- Hurricanes derive their “fuel” from the energy
of warm ocean water. Hurricanes form and strengthen when
surface ocean temperatures are warmer than 80 degrees Fahrenheit (°F).
- Ocean temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico just prior to Hurricane
Katrina’s landfall were approximately 87°F, nearly
1° above average. Hurricane Katrina made landfall along
the Louisiana/Mississippi border, to the east of New Orleans, as a
Category 3 hurricane with wind speeds of 125 mph.
What are levees? Why are they necessary in New Orleans?
- A levee is an embankment built along a body of
water, such as a river or lake, to prevent flooding.
- Levees were first constructed in New Orleans to confine the Mississippi
River to its present channel. If the Mississippi River were not controlled
by humans, it would shift its course 100 miles to the west.
- Levees were also built along Lake Pontchartrain to prevent flooding
in New Orleans. These levees were designed to withstand a direct hit
by a Category 3 hurricane.
- During Hurricane Katrina, multiple levees failed,
flooding 80% of New Orleans.
Why is New Orleans below sea level?
- New Orleans is built on the Mississippi River delta.
A delta forms at the mouth of a river where it flows into a larger
body of water. Sediment carried by the river is deposited and builds
upward toward the surface of the water, creating new land.
- Before humans began to control the Mississippi, the river would
periodically shift its course. After a delta formed
in one location, the river would seek a shorter, steeper path to the
ocean, and the entire river system would shift to a new position.
- Today, sediment from the Mississippi is channeled directly into
the Gulf of Mexico, bypassing New Orleans. Without any new sediment
input, the existing sediments compress, leading to subsidence and
causing New Orleans to sink.
- As New Orleans sinks, levees must be built higher and higher to
maintain protection against flooding. At present, the river
surface is 20-30 feet above the land surface in many locations.
How do wetlands help to reduce hurricane damage?
- A wetland is an area that is regularly flooded
with water, containing plants adapted for life in a saturated environment.
Wetlands trap sediment, recycle nutrients, purify water, buffer coastlines,
and provide unique habitats to many birds, wildlife, amphibians, and
fish.
- When a hurricane’s storm surge flows inland, wetlands slow
the water and reduce the strength of the waves, and thus
reduce hurricane impacts.
- Wetlands serve as a buffer for flood events. They
soak up water like a sponge, and then release it gradually, absorbing
the impact of the flood.
- Louisiana loses 40 square miles of wetlands every year
through subsidence and drainage for agriculture. If this destruction
continues, all of Louisiana’s wetlands will disappear within
200 years.
HURRICANE LINKS
Up-to-date Atlantic and Eastern Pacific hurricane information:
National Hurricane Center
Atlantic Tropical Weather Center
Educational pages:
Hurricane
Research Division's Hurricane FAQ page
Hurricanes
- Online Meteorology Guide (University of Illinois)
NASA's
Hurricane Resource Page
Hurricane Hunters
Seasonal hurricane forecasts:
Colorado
State University's Tropical Meteorology Project
NOAA's
Climate Prediction Center
University
College London
Hurricane data and information:
Global Hurricane
Data, 1851-2005
Worldwide
Tropical Cyclone Names
Hurricane Katrina:
Hurricane
Katrina
|