Hurricane Katia's winds peaked at 135 mph, making it a category 4 hurricane.
Hurricane Katia was stronger, reaching peak strength with 135 mph sustained winds, making it a low category 4 hurricane. Hurricane Irene peaked with 120 mph sustained winds, making it a category 3.
If you mean Katrina peak winds were 175 mph. If you mean Katia peak winds were 135 mph.
Hurricane Charley peaked as a strong category 4 hurricane with sustained winds of 150 mph.
All hurricanes have had very strong winds. By definition a hurricane must have sustained winds of at least 74 mph.
A hurricane kills people destroys their homes flash floods strong winds
strong winds, powerful waves, heavy storms
I think it is a hurricane.
The storm on its way to the UK is post-tropical cyclone Katia. Because it has lost tropical characteristics, though the storm is no longer classified as a hurricane even though it is still producing hurricane-force or near hurricane-force winds.
No, a hurricane's strong winds are not capable of lifting a human off the ground. However, these winds can be extremely dangerous and cause significant damage through flying debris, collapsing buildings, and other hazardous conditions.
At peak intensity Otto was a category 1 hurricane with 85 mph sustained winds.
If you are referring to the Hermine in 2010, then no. Hermine peaked as a strong tropical storm with 65 mph winds. To be a hurricane winds must be at least 74 mph.