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"The levees are broken, but our spirits are not." - New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin, after Hurricane Katrina devastated the city in 2005.
Hurricane Katrina dealt the city of New Orleans one of its hardest blows ever. By the time Katrina moved on 80 percent of the city was flooded.
Hurricane Katrina hit landfall on August 27th, and on September 6th an emergency evacuation was given by the Governor of Louisiana. Hurricane Katrina caused massive damage to the state of Louisiana through massive winds, rain, and storm surges that broke the levees.
Hurricane Katrina was the largest and third strongest hurricane ever recorded to make landfall in the U.S. In New Orleans, the levees were designed for Category 3, but Katrina peaked at a Category 5 hurricane, with winds up to 175 miles per hour. The storm surge from Katrina was 20-feet (six meters) high. 705 people are reported as still missing as a result of hurricane Katrina. Hurricane Katrina affected over 15 million people in different factors such as economy, evacuations, gas prices or drinking water. The final death toll was at 1,836, primarily from Louisiana (1,577) and Mississippi (238).
Hurricane Katrina reached hurricane status on August 25, 2005.
"The levees are broken, but our spirits are not." - New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin, after Hurricane Katrina devastated the city in 2005.
Because the city is under sea level and the levees did not help.
Hurricane Katrina caused a lot of destruction it was a Category 3 hurricane with winds of 125mph and made land fall in Burastriuph, Louisiana. Hurricane Katrina not only flooded with her own rain but brought the Gulf of Mexico into Louisiana because the levees broke. To make the answer short this hurricane is the most costliest hurricane, damage was at $81.2 Billion dollars. 1,836 people were confirmed dead.
Hurricane Katrina caused a lot of destruction it was a Category 3 hurricane with winds of 125mph and made land fall in Burastriuph, Louisiana. Hurricane Katrina not only flooded with her own rain but brought the Gulf of Mexico into Louisiana because the levees broke. To make the answer short this hurricane is the most costliest hurricane, damage was at $81.2 Billion dollars. 1,836 people were confirmed dead.
Hurricane Katrina dealt the city of New Orleans one of its hardest blows ever. By the time Katrina moved on 80 percent of the city was flooded.
The embankments are called levees. When the levees around New Orleans failed during and after Hurricane Katrina it led to catastrophic flooding. Note that money had been allocated for work on the levees prior to that but it was decided to use it to improve the roads on top of the levees which, technically, was an "improvement" but one wonders how it would have all played out if it had instead been used to improve the strength of those those levees prior to Katrina.
Hurricane Katrina hit landfall on August 27th, and on September 6th an emergency evacuation was given by the Governor of Louisiana. Hurricane Katrina caused massive damage to the state of Louisiana through massive winds, rain, and storm surges that broke the levees.
I am! I live in Gulfport, MS. The direct hit was in Gulfport, not New Orleans. New Orleans just happen to have poor quality levees.
No. Hurricane Katrina was in 2005.
Hurricane Katrina reached hurricane status on August 25, 2005.
Hurricane Katrina was the largest and third strongest hurricane ever recorded to make landfall in the U.S. In New Orleans, the levees were designed for Category 3, but Katrina peaked at a Category 5 hurricane, with winds up to 175 miles per hour. The storm surge from Katrina was 20-feet (six meters) high. 705 people are reported as still missing as a result of hurricane Katrina. Hurricane Katrina affected over 15 million people in different factors such as economy, evacuations, gas prices or drinking water. The final death toll was at 1,836, primarily from Louisiana (1,577) and Mississippi (238).
One pro is that the levees help protect the land from a floodplain. Also, the levees help during hurricanes [that's the only one..I think]. But sometimes the levees are not always useful. Just like hurricane Katrina, the levees didn't help or work when the water flooded over from the water in the Gulf of Mexico.