Because of Savannah's geography (it's mostly flat land), its average high tide (which can reach 6-8 feet), and its population (it has over 135,000 people, and has a metro population of at least 345,000), a category five hurricane would create unbelievable death and destruction. Imagine a Cape Verde Island-type, 400-mile wide category five hurricane, with 165 mph winds, slamming into the city during high tide. The high winds would cause glass windows on tall skyscrapers and tall buildings in Downtown Savannah to shatter, raining glass everywhere. Thousands of weak buildings would collapse. Billboards, trees, cars and trucks, pieces of brick and wood, even people and animals-anything not bolted down would go flying. Then, things would get very bad. The hurricane's winds would likely create a storm surge of 30-40 feet, or ten to twelve meters. The tidal wave would collapse thousands more weak and short buildings. The floodwaters would drown much much of the city. By the time the hurricane passes, the devastation would be unbelievable. More than 80% of the city would be flooded. There would be many thousands of fatalities, and over $80 billion in damage. And it would take years before the city would return to normal
Hurricane Andrew was stronger. It was a category 5 hurricane with peak winds of 175 mph, making landfall still as a category 5 with winds of 165 mph. Floyd was a category 4 hurricane with peak winds of 155 mph. It made landfall as a category 2 hurricane with winds of 105 mph.
Yes. Hurricane Richard was a category 2 storm that struck Belize in October 2010.
Hurricane Andrew was a category 5 hurricane when it passed over the Bahamas and Florida. That's where Hurricane Andrew was at it's peak intensity. It was downgraded to a category 3 after Florida then struck Louisiana as a category 3.
Yes. Hurricane Rita was a major category 5 hurricane that struck the U.S. Gulf Coast. It was one of the most intense and one of the costliest hurricanes on record.
Hurricane Isaac formed on august s1, 2012 and struck the U.S. on August 29.
Hurricane Isaac struck the Lesser Antilles, Haiti, the Dominican Republic and Cuba as a tropical storm and struck Louisiana as a category 1 hurricane.
Hurricane Nicole in 1998 was a category 1 hurricane. It formed on November the 24th and dissipated on December 1, 1998. Its top winds reached 85 miles an hour and did not affect any land. Hurricane Nicole in 2016 was a category 4 hurricane with peak sustained winds of 130 mph. It struck Bermuda while at category 3 intensity.
Hurricane Andrew was stronger. It was a category 5 hurricane with peak winds of 175 mph, making landfall still as a category 5 with winds of 165 mph. Floyd was a category 4 hurricane with peak winds of 155 mph. It made landfall as a category 2 hurricane with winds of 105 mph.
Yes. Hurricane Richard was a category 2 storm that struck Belize in October 2010.
Hurricane Andrew was a category 5 hurricane when it passed over the Bahamas and Florida. That's where Hurricane Andrew was at it's peak intensity. It was downgraded to a category 3 after Florida then struck Louisiana as a category 3.
Yes. Hurricane Rita was a major category 5 hurricane that struck the U.S. Gulf Coast. It was one of the most intense and one of the costliest hurricanes on record.
Hurricane Isaac formed on august s1, 2012 and struck the U.S. on August 29.
That depends on what you mean by rank. In terms of rating, it was a category 5. It was the second deadliest, eighth most intense, and seventeenth costliest Atlantic hurricane on record.
Hurricane Ike, which hit Texas on September 23, 2008 as a strong category 2 hurricane with a storm surge equivalent of a category 5 hurricane. The storm caused approximately 20 billion dollars in damage.
Yes. In August of 2012 Hurricane Isaac struck Louisiana. Another hurricane named Isaac passed east of Bermuda in 2006. Another Hurricane Isaac reached category 4 strength in 2000.
I believe Hurricane Rita in late Sept. 2005 was the last Cat 5 to threaten the Gulf Of Mexico. Wilma came close, a month later, but only skirted the gulf before heading towards south Florida.
Hurricane Andrew was a more powerful and destructive storm compared to Hurricane Irene. Andrew made landfall as a Category 5 hurricane in 1992, causing widespread devastation in the Bahamas and southern Florida. In contrast, Irene, which struck the East Coast in 2011, was classified as a Category 3 hurricane and caused significant damage but was not as severe as Andrew.