Hurricane Katrina Essay

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    Differences Between Katrina and Harvey Google defines hurricane as a storm with violent winds. Hurricanes are huge storms that form over the ocean that have the potential to destroy whole cities. Hurricane Katrina (2005) and Hurricane Harvey (2017) are two infamous storms that will make American history. Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Harvey were alike and different in many different ways including location, duration, power, speed etc. Hurricane Katrina hit land in Louisiana on August 29th, 2005

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    PTSD and Hurricane Katrina Essay

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    life, hidden away in our communities, just trying to skate by. But there are sometimes moments that occur in a lifetime, where that sheltered routine, that is so ingrained in our minds, is taken upon differently. August 29, 2005, day one of hurricane Katrina; this date, is one that is permanently ingrained in thousands of citizens of New Orleans. On this day, people have seen family members drown, houses destroyed, as well as

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    The History of Hurricane Katrina Essay

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    The History of Hurricane Katrina On August 29, 2005, the third strongest and biggest hurricane ever recorded in American history hit the Gulf Coast at eight o’clock a.m. The interaction between a tropical depression and a tropical wave created a tropical storm later referred to as Hurricane Katrina (FAQS, 2013). Forming over the Bahamas, Hurricane Katrina gradually strengthened as it moved closer and closer to the Gulf of Mexico. Recorded on August 28th, 2005, Katrina jumped from a category three

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    Easy on August 23, 2015. This named storm is better known as Hurricane Katrina. The damages that Hurricane Katrina still sit very well with the people that experienced the storm first hand. Personally I have never been to New Orleans, I have no family members or friends at all down south and although I am not very familiar with the south region of the UNited States at all that does not mean that exploring the effects that the hurricane caused can’t be underlined through climate change, but that is

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    Hurricane Katrina You think hail is bad? Try a hurricane, but not any hurricane, hurricane Katrina. Hurricane Katrina is from a tropical wave and it hit the Bahamas in2005. It was the 11th tropical storm in the 2005 hurricane season. A hurricane is a violent wind and water storm that causes tons of damage and death. The fuel for hurricanes is water vapor. Hurricanes are formed by water vapor and hot air the reason for hurricanes is to cool down the ocean. How did this disaster change society

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    Hurricane Katrina was one of the most popular disaster’s that devastated the area in which it affected. Many lives were lost in the storm itself and in the after math. Said to blame by many is FEMA and the U.S government. The two were blamed for their lack of response time, pure carelessness, and the inability to properly communicate. Emergency responders rushed to the Gulf Coast. The response teams struggled due to the land lines and cell phones faultiness. Also devastating, the mobile radio systems

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    1,833 people died during Hurricane Katrina. The storm began as a tropical depression in the Bahamas on August 23, 2005, 6 days before it hit the US, as a category 3 hurricane. By August 28 evacuations were underway in Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi, with New Orleans at special risk. The day before the hurricane hit New Orleans, mayor, Ray Nagin issued the city’s first ever mandatory evacuation and told the citizens of New Orleans that the Superdome sports stadium would be “the shelter of last

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    On August 29, 2005, hurricane Katrina made landfall in Louisiana as a category three storm and brought with it some of the most catastrophic effects that any hurricane has ever left behind. Twenty foot surges of flood water washed into New Orleans after the levees broke, and ended up flooding over 80% of the city. It was now in the hands of the United States government to help the millions of displaced Americans find proper shelter, food, water, and services that were required for their recovery

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    Terrence Mielus HES 210 Rough draft 11/17/17 Hurricane Katrina & it's effects on health care On a normal August day, Hurricane Katrina inflicted massive damage on 3 of the poorest states in the United States. Mississippi, with a poverty rate of 22 percent; Louisiana, with a poverty rate of 20 percent; and Alabama, with a poverty rate of 22 percent (Rodriguez, H. & Aguirre, B, E.). Katrina was the cause of one of the biggest evacuations of any major American city in history. These cities also

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    Hurricane Katrina Ever wonder how bad hurricanes get? Early in the day on August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast of the United States. It had a rating of 3 on the Hurricane Scale–it brought continuous winds of 100–140 miles per hour and 400 miles across. The storm itself did an abundance of destruction, but its aftermath was somewhat apocalyptic. Hundreds of thousands of people in Louisiana were taken from their own homes, and experts say that Katrina caused

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