Over 52 feet
Hurricane Andrew was part of the 1992 Atlantic hurricane season.
Yes. Hurricane Andrew was Tropical Depression Three for about a day before becoming Tropical Storm Andrew and then Hurricane Andrew 5 days later.
Nobody did. Hurricane Andrew formed and dissipated by natural forces. Nobody can stop a hurricane.
It varies widely. Some of the smallest eyes are around two to three miles wide. A normal size eye is about 15 to 30 miles wide. A very large eye can be over 60 miles wide. Generally the stronger the hurricane the smaller the eye.
The eye of a hurricane is an area of calm clear weather at a hurricane's center.
The big circle in the sky when a hurricane is coming is called the "eye." It is a region of calm weather and low pressure at the center of the storm. Winds are typically light and skies are clear in the eye of a hurricane.
Hurricane Andrew was part of the 1992 Atlantic hurricane season.
Hurricane Andrew was in 1992. Hurricane Katrina was in 2005.
Hurricane Andrew started in the Atlantic Ocean.
Yes. Hurricane Andrew was Tropical Depression Three for about a day before becoming Tropical Storm Andrew and then Hurricane Andrew 5 days later.
Hurricane Andrew
Not at all. Hurricane Andrew was a category 5 hurricane, making it one of the strongest hurricanes of the past 20 years.
Hurricane Andrew wasn't as bad or as strong as Katrina, if that's what you mean.
Nobody did. Hurricane Andrew formed and dissipated by natural forces. Nobody can stop a hurricane.
The eye of the hurricane is the center of the hurricane.
No. The eye of a hurricane is free of storms.
It didn't. Hurricane Andrew was the most damaging hurricane on record until Hurricane Katrina in 2005.