Hurricane Rita
| Category 5 hurricane (SSHS) |
Hurricane Rita in the Gulf of Mexico on September 21, 2005
|
| Formed |
September 17, 2005 |
| Dissipated |
September 26, 2005 |
Highest
winds |
| 180 mph (285 km/h)
(1-minute sustained) |
|
| Lowest pressure |
895 mbar (hPa; 26.44 inHg) |
| Fatalities |
7 direct, 113 indirect |
| Damage |
$11.3 billion (2005 USD)
$11.94 billion (2007 USD) |
Areas
affected |
Bahamas, Florida, Cuba,
Yucatán Peninsula, Louisiana, Texas, Mississippi, Arkansas |
Part of the
2005 Atlantic hurricane season |
Hurricane Rita was the fourth-most intense Atlantic hurricane ever recorded
and the most intense tropical cyclone ever observed in the Gulf of Mexico. Rita caused $11.3 billion in damage on the U.S. Gulf Coast in September 2005.[1] Rita was the seventeenth named storm, tenth hurricane, fifth major
hurricane, and third Category 5 hurricane of the historic 2005 Atlantic
hurricane season.
Rita made landfall on September 24 between Sabine
Pass, Texas and Johnsons Bayou, Louisiana, as a Category 3 hurricane on
the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale. It continued on through parts of
southeast Texas. The storm surge caused extensive damage along the Louisiana and extreme
southeastern Texas coasts and completely destroyed some coastal communities. The storm killed
seven people directly; many others died in evacuations and from indirect effects.[2]
Storm history
The storm system that became Rita formed at the tail of an old frontal boundary, where convection and low-level circulation
around an upper-level low developed steadily for over two days. A surface low formed
near the disturbance, and the season's 18th tropical depression soon formed east of the Turks and Caicos. Less than a day after forming, the depression became the 17th tropical storm
of the season on September 18 and was named Rita. A mandatory evacuation was ordered for
the entire Florida Keys.
Rita was slow to become a hurricane; National Hurricane Center (NHC)
reports early on September 20 estimated the storm's sustained surface winds at hurricane
force (75 mph or 120 km/h). However, Rita lacked a complete eyewall; forecasters
identified Rita as a tropical storm with 70 mph (110 km/h) winds overnight. Aircraft observations released at 9:45 a.m. EDT
showed a closed eyewall and winds clearly at hurricane strength. Four hours later, the NHC reported that Rita had reached
Category 2 hurricane strength, with 100 mph (160 km/h) maximum sustained winds.
Warm water in the Gulf of Mexico, 1 °F (0.5 °C) above average, favored storm intensification. As Rita entered the Gulf,
rapid intensification began. National Hurricane Center advisories issued every three hours each showed strengthening from 5 p.m.
EDT on September 20 to 11 a.m. EDT on September 21,
when Rita's maximum sustained winds increased to 140 mph (225 km/h). Rita continued to gain strength unabated. An update at 2:15
p.m. CDT (1815 UTC) said maximum winds had increased to 150 mph (240 km/h) and Rita's minimum pressure was 920 mbar
(hPa). Less than two hours later, at 3:55 p.m. CDT, another update reported that Rita had
strengthened to a Category 5 hurricane, with maximum wind speeds of 165 mph (265 km/h). At 6:50 p.m. CDT, a reconnaissance aircraft recorded pressure of 899 mbar (hPa) away
from the storm's center; the actual central pressure was thought to be lower still. At 10 p.m. CDT, Rita reached its maximum
intensity, with sustained winds of 180 mph (290 km/h) and an estimated minimum pressure of 895 mbar (hPa), (26.43 in Hg).
Hurricane Rita making its final landfall
Hurricane Rita's rapid intensification may in part be attributed to its passage over the Gulf
Loop Current and Eddy Vortex. (NASA animation showing the storm track before landfall)
Lt. Col. Warren Madden, a Hurricane Hunter and meteorologist for The Weather Channel, recorded
a peak wind gust of 235 mph (380 km/h) while flying in the eye of the storm, and called Rita "the strongest storm that I've ever
been in." Rita's intense winds destroyed or disabled several buoy-based weather stations.
Rita made landfall between Sabine Pass, Texas, and Johnson Bayou, Louisiana, at 02:38 CDT (07:38 UTC) on September 24, 2005 as a category 3
Hurricane with winds at 115 mph. Rita lost both hurricane and tropical storm status the day of landfall. Rita's remnants —
technically an extensive low pressure area — moved quickly out of the lower Mississippi
Valley and were absorbed by a cold front. The Hydrometeorological
Prediction Center ceased monitoring Tropical Depression Rita early on September
26.
Preparations
Louisiana
Before Rita, the mayor of New Orleans, Ray Nagin, had planned to begin reopening the city
after the damage caused by Hurricane Katrina on September 19. [3] However, as Rita developed in the
Gulf of Mexico, the reopening was cancelled and a re-evacuation of the city was initiated on September 21 as the storm was initially forecast to make landfall much closer to the city. Although Rita
remained well to the south and west of New Orleans, a pre-landfall storm surge overwhelmed a
levee of the Industrial Canal protecting the lower 9th Ward [4], a part of a
fragile and already compromised levee system as repairs continued. At landfall, more
parts of the levee wall were breached causing major reflooding in New Orleans. The original breaches had occurred a month earlier
as a result of Hurricane Katrina. [5]
In addition, residents of Cameron Parish, Calcasieu Parish, and parts of Jefferson
Davis Parish, Acadia Parish, Iberia Parish, and Vermillion Parish were
told to evacuate ahead of the storm.
Texas
Texas Governor Rick Perry recalled all
emergency personnel, including almost 1,200 Texas National Guard and 1,100
Texas State Guard members from Katrina
recovery efforts, and several hundred Texas Game Wardens in anticipation of Hurricane Rita's arrival. [6] On
September 22, Governor Perry and the Texas Department of Transportation implemented a
contraflow lane reversal on Interstate
45 north towards Dallas, on Interstate 10
west towards San Antonio, U.S. Highway 290
northwest to Austin.
Officials in Galveston County (which includes the city of Galveston), which was devastated by the Galveston
Hurricane of 1900, ordered mandatory evacuations, effective September 21 at 6 p.m.,
in a staggered sequence setting different zones in the area which were due to leave at different times over 24 hours, well in
advance of the storm's possible landfall later in the week but not enough in advance to ensure that all residents could evacuate
safely in advance of the storm. Nonetheless, many residents remained in the county because they were either unaware of the danger
of the storm or believed that it was more important to protect their belongings, particularly in the wake of looting following
Hurricane Katrina. The evacuation included transfer of all inpatients from the University of Texas Medical Branch hospital to
other regional hospitals. Thirty-one patients, including two on ventilators were prisoners under the ward of the Texas Department
of Corrections. These patients were systematically transferred to the University of Texas Health Center at Tyler.
Officials of Harris County hoped that the designation of zones A, B, and C would be able to prevent bottlenecks leaving the
area such as those seen out of New Orleans prior to Katrina and Hurricane Dennis earlier that year. Also, different zones were to be forced to go to certain cities in
Texas and were not allowed to exit their designated routes except for food and gas - another feature of the evacuation plan which
hoped to keep traffic and flow orderly throughout this timeframe. These evacuation-destination cities included Austin, College Station, San Antonio, Dallas, Huntsville, and Lufkin, Texas. The Weather Channel also
reported that evacuees were asked to try hotels in the Midland/Odessa area when hotels began to sell out in other areas.
Motorists stranded on
Highway 60 during Hurricane Rita evacuation.
On Wednesday, Houston mayor Bill White
urged residents to evacuate the city, telling residents, "Don't wait; the time for waiting is over," reminding residents of the
disaster in New Orleans. After heavy traffic snarled roads leading out of town and gas shortages left numerous vehicles stranded,
he backed off his earlier statement with, "If you're not in the evacuation zone, follow the news," advising people to use common
sense. However by 3:00 p.m. that afternoon, the freeway system in Houston was at a stand-still.
To the east of Houston, officials had set up evacuation routes in response to the slow evacuation of residents prior to
Hurricane Lili. During the Rita evacuation these preparations and their execution were
overwhelmed by the enormous and unprecedented number of people fleeing from the Houston area prior to the local residents. By the
time Jefferson County began their mandatory evacuation, local roads were already full of Houstonians. Designated evacuation
routes slowed to a pace far worse than with any previous hurricane.
By late Thursday morning, the contraflow lanes had been ordered after it was
determined that the state's highway system had become gridlocked. The Texas Department of
Transportation was unprepared to execute such a large-scale evacuation. Coordination and implementation of the contraflow plan
took 8 to 10 hours as inbound traffic was forced to exit and police were stationed to assist with traffic flow. Evacuees fought
traffic Wednesday afternoon through mid-day Friday, moving only a fraction of the normal distance expected. Average travel times
to Dallas were 24-36 hours, travel times to Austin were 12-18 hours and travel times to San Antonio were 10-16 hours, depending
on the point of departure in Houston. Many motorists ran out of gas or experienced breakdowns in the record breaking temperatures
that neared 100 °F (38 °C). Traffic volumes did not ease for nearly 48 hours as more than three million residents evacuated the
area in advance of the storm. This was the largest evacuation in United States history.
As part of the evacuation, Johnson Space Center in Houston handed off
control of the International Space Station to their Russian counterparts.
Concerns had been raised over the state of the oil industry in response to Rita. The storm threatened a large amount of oil
infrastructure that was left undamaged by Katrina. The Texas
Gulf Coast is home to 23% of the United States' refining capacity, and numerous offshore production platforms were in
Rita's path. While no potential storm path would threaten all of the capacity at once, a direct strike on Houston could disable
up to 8% of the nation's refining capacity. Valero Energy Corp, the nation's
largest refiner, stated on September 21 that Rita could have caused gasoline prices to rise
well above $3 per US gallon ($0.79/L).
Impact
In some areas, the effects of Hurricane Rita were not nearly as severe as anticipated. The storm
surge feared in Galveston and Houston struck farther east as the storm's center came ashore at the Louisiana border; winds
blowing offshore in Texas actually flattened the surge, which was only seven feet (2 m), well below the height of the Galveston
seawall. The five inches (130 mm) of rain expected to fall overnight in New Orleans also did not
happen, and the pressure on the levee system was eased. Still, storm surge of 15-20 feet (4.5-6.1 m) struck southwestern
Louisiana, and coastal parishes experienced extensive damage. In Cameron
Parish the communities of Holly Beach, Hackberry and Cameron were essentially destroyed.
[7] In Calcasieu Parish the communities of Lake
Charles, Moss Bluff, Sulphur,
Westlake and Vinton also suffered heavy
damage. In Beauregard Parish the communities of DeRidder and Merryville also suffered heavy
damage.
It is estimated that two million people lost electricity. [8] Total damage is estimated at approximately $10 billion, making Rita
the ninth-costliest storm in U.S. history. [2]
Following Rita, gas prices fell in the U.S instead of rising as feared.
Deaths
The reported death toll by Rita was 120. Only seven were direct deaths. One was caused by a tornado spawned in the storm's
outer bands, one was due to storm surge flooding and three others were caused by trees blown down in the storm. The two Florida
deaths both occurred in rip currents caused by Rita's distant waves.
Direct deaths indicate those caused by the direct effects of the winds, flooding, tornadoes, storm surge or
oceanic effects of Rita. Indirect deaths indicate those caused by hurricane-related accidents
(including car accidents, crimes, fires or other incidents), cleanup and evacuation incidents and health issues (such as poisoning, illnesses, lack of emergency aid).
Arkansas
While Rita weakened to a tropical depression, the outer bands continued to spawn numerous tornadoes in Arkansas, including one
in Lonoke County and another in Conway
County, damaging many homes and businesses in several communities. In addition, significant flooding has been reported in
several areas. [24]
The tornadoes were unusual in that they moved in a northwestern direction due to the direction in which Rita was moving. Most
tornadoes move northeast. [25]
No deaths caused by Rita were reported in Arkansas.
South Florida and Cuba
More than 340,000 people were under voluntary or mandatory evacuation orders in Florida and
Cuba. Storm surge flooding was reported along the low-lying
Florida Keys. The Overseas Highway
(U.S. 1) connecting the islands was flooded and impassable in some sections. As of 8 p.m.
EDT on Tuesday, September 20, about 25,000 customers in Broward and Miami-Dade and 2,100 in the Keys
were without electricity. [26]
A state of emergency was declared by Florida
Governor Jeb Bush and a federal emergency by President George W. Bush in four counties:
Broward, Collier, Miami-Dade and Monroe. More than 2,000 National Guard
troops and dozens of law enforcement officers were brought in. [27]
No deaths were reported in either Florida or Cuba from the
initial impact.
Florida Panhandle
While the Florida Panhandle escaped most of the land effects from Rita, two deaths
were reported on beaches. Both were due to high surf and rip currents caused by Rita's distant waves. [28]
Louisiana
Storm surge damage from Rita
New Orleans's levee system had already sustained heavy damage from Hurricane Katrina before Rita's outer bands of rain fell on the city. On Friday, September 23, the day before landfall, rising water due to Hurricane Rita poured through breaches in the
patched Industrial Canal levee in New Orleans' devastated Ninth Ward, as reported by the Army
Corps of Engineers. Water entered the Ninth Ward over two 32-foot (10 m) wide patches in the levee as of about 9 a.m. CDT
on Friday, September 23. Water in the Ninth Ward was reported to be waist-deep at 11 a.m.
CDT on Friday. By approximately 5 p.m. CDT, water had begun gushing through another patch in the London Avenue Canal into the surrounding Gentilly neighborhood. Some pumping stations were
abandoned. By Saturday night, September 24, water from a 150-foot gap in the Industrial
Canal levee flooded some areas of the Ninth Ward to eight feet deep. [29]
Damaged homes at the Texas-Louisiana border
Damage in southwestern Louisiana was extensive. In Cameron Parish, the communities of Hackberry [30], Cameron, Creole, Grand Chenier, Holly Beach, and Johnson Bayou were heavily
damaged or entirely destroyed. A casino boat and several barges were floating loose in
Lake Charles and damaged a bridge spanning Interstate 10 across the Calcasieu River. Lake Charles
experienced severe flooding, with reports of water rising 6-8 feet in areas around Lake Calcasieu.
At a hotel on the Contraband Bayou, water was reportedly up to the second floor. There was also
extensive damage to its regional airport. [31] Damage to
the city's electrical system was so severe that authorities warned that power would not return for two weeks, if not longer.
In Vinton, several fires burned, the roof was torn off the town's recreation center
and many homes were damaged by fallen trees. Widespread flooding was reported in coastal
parishes. In Terrebonne Parish, virtually
every levee was breached. [32] Some people were stranded
in flooded communities and had to be rescued by boat. At least 100 people were reported rescued
from rooftops, as at least 25 more remained stranded. [33]
Louisiana Governor Kathleen Blanco reported that 700,000 homes lost power in 41 of
the state's 64 parishes. [34]
In Vermilion Parish south of Abbeville, rescue efforts were undertaken for up to 1,000 people stranded by local flooding. On Saturday,
September 24, 250 people were rescued. [35]
After being reduced to a tropical storm, Rita entered DeSoto and Caddo Parishes, the eye passed just west of Downtown Shreveport before crossing the Arkansas border. At the height of
the storm over 175,000 people had lost power in the National Weather Service
Shreveport's forecast area, mainly across Deep East Texas into northwest Louisiana. Two
fatalities occurred in the Ark-La-Tex. A tree fell on a person and the other fatality
occurred when a teenager was electrocuted when picking up a "hot" power line. Shreveport recorded its 2nd lowest pressure ever
recorded as the center of Rita moved through Shreveport around 6 pm Saturday evening. The pressure recorded was 29.05 inches
(983.7 mb) which was only .01 inch higher than the lowest pressure on record of 29.04 inches back on February 27, 1902.[36]
Mississippi
Several tornadoes from Rita's outer bands affected the state. At least 40 homes and an industrial plant were damaged and one
person killed by a tornado in Humphreys County in central Mississippi.
Another tornado (unconfirmed) was reported in Bolivar County.
One death was reported in Wilkinson County, although it has not been
confirmed if it was storm-related. [37]
A tornado touched down on Mississippi State University's campus. MSU
officials reported significant damage to some buildings. There were also numerous mobile homes damaged at the University Hills
trailer park just off the campus. There were several non-life threatening injuries.
Lauderdale County in east central Mississippi reported several confirmed and unconfirmed tornado touch downs in and near the
cities of Marion and Meridian, an area recovering from damage from Category 2 winds in Hurricane Katrina.
Texas
Two satellite images showing the extent of flooding caused by Rita in Louisiana and Texas.
On the morning of September 23, 23 people were killed when a bus carrying 45 nursing home evacuees from Brighton Gardens in Bellaire,
Texas erupted into flames and exploded on Interstate 45 in Wilmer, southeast of Dallas. The fire started in the brake system,
and the passengers' therapeutic oxygen tanks may have caused the bus to explode. [38][39] Many of the passengers were mobility-impaired making escape difficult or impossible. [40]
In the late evening, a fire broke out in the Strand
District of Galveston, Texas, gutting several homes. However, the
fire department was able to fight the wind-whipped blaze and prevent it from spreading
through the city. No serious injuries were reported in the fire. Around midnight, a vacant restaurant collapsed nearby, which was
reportedly as a result of the fire that weakened the walls. [41]
For the most part, Houston escaped major damage, apart from extensive loss of power.
Some windows blew out of some downtown skyscrapers, and some trees and signals were
down. [42] Thirty one deaths have been reported in
Harris County, of which all of them were indirect (mostly related to the evacuation
and cleanup). [43]
The county of Jasper, Texas was also greatly affected. It is located near the Sabine River, near the Louisiana and Texas
border. Jasper, known as the "Jewel of the Pines" lost many of its pine trees when Rita came through, leveling most of them down
to the stump. Jasper county residents were running out of gas and many relied on the only news available at the time from Mike
Lout, local radio station owner, who stayed on the air during the entire time of the storm. Many families lost their homes of
many years, returning to see that they were crushed by one or more trees.
North of Houston, the 2.5-mile-wide Lake Livingston dam
sustained substantial damage from powerful waves driven by 117 mph winds [44] and officials started an emergency release of water to lessen pressure on the dam. A number of news
outlets reported on Sunday, September 25 2005, that the
discharge put lives at risk downstream and threatened a major bridge as well due to a sizable barge coming adrift. Repairs to the
dam were expected to take months to complete. [45] After
water levels were lowered and an inspection was conducted by national and local experts, the dam was declared stable late on
Monday, September 26 2005. [46]
Church in Beaumont with roof ripped off by Hurricane Rita.
Communities in the "Golden Triangle" formed by Beaumont, Port Arthur, and Orange sustained enormous wind damage. Texas Governor Rick Perry declared a nine-county disaster area. In
Beaumont an estimated 25% of the trees in the heavily wooded neighborhoods were uprooted. In Groves, the home of Texas's Pecan Festival, an equal number of the pecan trees were leveled. An enormous
number of houses and businesses suffered extensive damage from wind and falling trees. The water treatment plant in
Port Neches was heavily damaged. Some areas did not have power for more than six
weeks. A mandatory evacuation had been issued before Rita's landfall. Those displaced by Rita were offered up to 60 days of hotel
rooms, generators, chainsaws, and monetary assistance by FEMA. The "Golden Triangle" area was spared a more devastating storm
surge by Rita's slight eastward turn just before landfall, which placed most of the coastal community to the left of the eye and
in the storm's least-damaging quadrant. Rita's surge was contained by Port Arthur's extensive levee system. Bolivar Peninsula
between Galveston and Sabine Pass
experienced only a small storm surge, in contrast to areas east of Rita's center where sent a 20-foot surge struck Louisiana's
unprotected towns.
Aftermath
Economic effects
From the Department of Energy, the path of Hurricane Rita and the site of refineries in the Texas and Louisiana area.
The heavy concentration of oil infrastructure in the Gulf of Mexico makes hurricanes of Rita's intensity very problematic.
Currently, very little spare crude oil capacity exists in the United States, and the Gulf of Mexico produces some 2 million
barrels per day (300 ML) total, as well as having some 30% of the total refining
capacity of the United States. Rita's path traveled through a dense area of offshore pipelines and oil platforms, and on land to an area with large refineries. With over half of Gulf production still shut
down in the wake of Katrina, some economists have stated that a worst case scenario is for gasoline prices to briefly touch $5/US
gallon ($1.30/L), which would be easily the highest real price for gasoline paid in the United States during the internal
combustion era. However the oil industry escaped essentially unscathed from the storm and post-storm predictions estimated only
minor price rises. With some 200,000 jobless claims attributed to Katrina, Rita could be a
further drag on a weakened US economy.
The most pessimistic projections have GDP growth cut by 1% on an annualized
basis in the United States in the second half of 2005, with as many as 500,000 people made unemployed. Some economists argue that the rebuilding effort could buoy the economy in 2006, while others
argue that the energy spike could decrease consumer confidence by enough to send the economy into a full-fledged recession when combined with the Federal Reserve's recent increases in interest rates.
Due to the impending oil shortage and increasing gas prices, Georgia Governor Sonny
Perdue declared what he termed "snow days," closing all Georgia public primary and secondary schools on September 26 and 27 to conserve fuel for buses.
Military relief operations
On September 24 2005, following the havoc caused by
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, the National Guard named Brig. Gen. Douglas Pritt of the
41st Brigade Combat Team, Oregon Army National Guard, head of Joint Task Force Rita
(formally called JTF Ponchartrain). [47] [48] The 1,400 Oregonian soldiers and airmen, including the 1st
Battalion of the 186th Infantry which is designated a quick response unit, are joined by engineers and military police from Louisiana, a Stryker brigade from Pennsylvania, and an engineering battalion from Missouri. It is their
mission to provide relief support for all of the areas in Texas and Louisiana effected by the two storms and to remove
obstructions that might otherwise hinder help to those affected.
Post-Rita Deaths
Due largely to what many have called the largest two day evacuation in the country's history, many people died in the weeks
following Rita's passing. The stress brought on by 98 degree heat in cars that were forced to turn off their air conditioners on
the gridlocked highways was intense and the elderly in particular developed a large number of health problems in the weeks
following the storm. For weeks funeral homes in the Beaumont area were unable to respond to the large number of requests by
family members to retrieve the bodies of their loved ones to the north. These deaths are not currently counted as officially
caused by the hurricane.
American Red Cross operations
The American Red Cross continued to provide disaster relief to Hurricane Katrina affected areas, but as a result of Hurricane
Rita, had to open additional shelters in other gulf states. The Red
Cross also expanded their Hurricane Katrina internet "Safe List" for use by those affected by Hurricane Rita.
AmeriCorps relief operations
AmeriCorps sent several crews to Texas, Mississippi and Louisiana in response to
Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita. The crews originated from two main
organizations, the National Civilian Community Corps (NCCC) and the
Washington Conservation Corps (WCC), as well as from smaller Americorps organizations such as Americorps St. Louis' Emergency
Response Team (ERT). The crews performed a number of relief tasks for hurricane survivors, including support on the
FEMA/Carnival Cruise
Lines shelter ship, tarping damaged roofs, and debris removal. As of the beginning of 2006, AmeriCorps teams have been
involved in the rebuilding efforts in Louisiana and Mississippi. Teams have also operated volunteer camps like Camp Premier as
well as assisted with the Made with Love cafe. As of May 2006, AmeriCorps reported that it would continue to send relief to
affected areas.
Retirement
- See also: List of retired
Atlantic hurricanes
The name Rita was retired in the spring of 2006 and will never be used again for an Atlantic hurricane. It was replaced by Rina, which will be used in the 2011 season.[49]
Records
The use of the name "Rita" reflects the record-breaking activity of the 2005 hurricane season: only once before had a name
starting with "R" (the seventeenth name in the list each season) been used for an Atlantic storm, in
1995 for Hurricane Roxanne.
The formation of Rita actually marked the third time that seventeen storms had formed in a season since tropical storm naming
began in 1950. However, in the 1969 season, under less-sophisticated
forecasting systems, many tropical storms were not named; the seventeenth storm of 1969 was named Hurricane Martha.
Other records set by Rita:
- Earliest 17th named storm in Atlantic hurricane season
- Fourth most-intense storm in Atlantic basin
- Greatest one-hour pressure drop in Atlantic basin
- Most intense hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico (breaking record set by Hurricane
Katrina only three weeks earlier)
See also
References
- ^ National Hurricane Center (2007-01-23). November 2005 Atlantic Tropical Weather Summary. NOAA. Retrieved on 2007-01-25.
- ^ a
b c Richard D. Knabb, Daniel P. Brown, Jamie R. Rhome. NHC Rita Report (English). Retrieved on 26 June, 2007.
- ^ Solar Navigator. Solar Navigator (English). Retrieved on 26 June, 2007.
- ^ Benfield Inc.. Catastrophe Perspectives (English). Retrieved on 26
June, 2007.
- ^ Illinois Photo. Illinois Photo (English). Retrieved on 26 June,
2007.
- ^ Associated Press.
Coastal Evacuations in
Texas (English). Retrieved on 26 June, 2007.
- ^ Margaret Saizan. A Visual Story of Hurricane Rita (English). Retrieved on 26 June, 2007.
- ^ Benfield Inc.. Storm Centre
(English). Retrieved on 26 June, 2007.
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- ^ http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20050926006153&newsLang=en
- ^ http://www.kgw.com/sharedcontent/APStories/stories/D8CQSDL80.html
- ^ http://www.katu.com/news/story.asp?ID=79878
- ^ "Dennis, Katrina, Rita, Stan, and Wilma "Retired" from List of Storm Names."
NOAA. March 25,
2006.
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