Damage from Hurricane Sandy is estimated to cost $65 billion. As far as Atlantic hurricanes go, this makes Sandy's price tag second only to that of Hurricane Katrina.
No, Hurricane Sandy is not the strongest hurricane on record. While it was a powerful storm that caused significant damage, there have been other hurricanes that have had higher wind speeds and caused greater destruction. The 1935 Labor Day hurricane and Hurricane Allen in 1980 are examples of storms that were more intense than Sandy.
Go stay with family that live inland and far away from the shoreline. Board up your house and nail the furniture to the ground so it doesn't crash into stuff. So sorry about the pathetic answer Sincerely Mr. Nobody
more than half of japan
Well, My teacher and her daughter got a vacation to New York and she couldn't get back because of hurricane sandy. She told us their house is half underground half ground surface and they just stood in their homes. They couldn't get to use the subway.
Damage from Hurricane Sandy is estimated to cost $65 billion. As far as Atlantic hurricanes go, this makes Sandy's price tag second only to that of Hurricane Katrina.
As a hurricane, not that far. She was downgraded to a post-tropical cyclone just before making landfall at New Jersey's coast.
No. While the outer fringes of Sandy might give Detroit a bit of wind and rain, the storm itself is not expected to go that far west.
You should go to the National Hurricane Center. see the link below.
No, Hurricane Sandy is not the strongest hurricane on record. While it was a powerful storm that caused significant damage, there have been other hurricanes that have had higher wind speeds and caused greater destruction. The 1935 Labor Day hurricane and Hurricane Allen in 1980 are examples of storms that were more intense than Sandy.
Go stay with family that live inland and far away from the shoreline. Board up your house and nail the furniture to the ground so it doesn't crash into stuff. So sorry about the pathetic answer Sincerely Mr. Nobody
more than half of japan
It depends on where your home is, how it is built, and many other factors. If you are in an evacuation zone with any hurricane, don't be complacent. Go ahead and evacuate.
No. First of all, records don't extend back a thousand years. Official records only go back as far as the late 1800s, and reliable data on storm size probably did not come in until the mid to late 1900s with the advent of weather satellites. Hurricane Sandy had a gale diameter of about 1,100 miles, making it the largest Atlantic hurricane on record. However, Typhoon Tip in 1979 had a gale diameter of nearly 1,400 miles.
Well, My teacher and her daughter got a vacation to New York and she couldn't get back because of hurricane sandy. She told us their house is half underground half ground surface and they just stood in their homes. They couldn't get to use the subway.
Because there is no water to fuel it.A hurricane needs warm humid air. That's the basic ingredient for a hurricane. Once it starts to go inland the warm humid air stops going to the hurricane.(Warm humid air is found near the ocean.)It starts to lose its speed while going inland because the warm humid air stops coming.
it cant there are no volcanoes or earthquakes in florida i should know i lived there