No. Gustav was a Category 4 hurricane that fell just short of category 5 intensity.
No. Hurricane Gustav was a strong category 4 hurricane.
Hurricane Andrew was a Category 5 hurricane with 175 mph winds. The pressure was 922 mbar.
Hurricane Camille was a category 5.
Hurricane Isabel in 2003 was a category 5 hurricane.
Yes. Category 5 is the highest category a hurricane can attain. A landfall at category 5 intensity will likely cause catastrophic damage.
No, it is not. Gustav is smaller in both size and hurricane strength than Katrina. Katrina's strength actually reached the Category 5 level whereas Gustav reached only a Category 4.
No. Hurricane Gustav was a strong category 4 hurricane.
Hurricane Gustav was a category 4 Hurricane taking place from August 25 2008-September 4 2008. It went through the Carribean and through five states.
Hurricane Isabel was a category 5 hurricane.
Hurricane Andrew was a Category 5 hurricane with 175 mph winds. The pressure was 922 mbar.
Hurricane Camille was a category 5.
Gustav has been downgraded to a category 2 storm but it was categoraized as a category 4 storm earlier. i dnt know what Gustav was so y dnt u go ask some1 else!!!!!!!!!!!
Hurricane Michael was a Category 5 hurricane. It made landfall in the Florida Panhandle on October 10, 2018, with maximum sustained winds of 160 mph. It was the first Category 5 hurricane to make landfall in the United States since Hurricane Andrew in 1992.
Hurricane Gustav made landfall near New Orleans, Louisiana in the early morning of September 1, 2008. It initially struck as a Category 3 storm but due to its interaction with land was downgraded to a Category 2.
Hurricane Mitch of 1998 was a category 5.
Hurricane Isabel of 2003 was a category 5.
Category 5. 'Rita was the seventeenth named storm, tenth hurricane, fifth major hurricane, and third Category 5 hurricane of the historic 2005 Atlantic hurricane season.' (from wikipedia)