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Learn about Hurricane Katrina in 2005, its devastating impact on Florida and the Gulf States, including damage, evacuations, storm surge, and urban flooding. Explore the emergency shelters, high winds, and the challenges faced during and after the storm.
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August 29: LouisianaCategory 4 August 25-26: FloridaCategory 1
Katrina in Florida • Facts: • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2005 • Category 1 hurricane • Crossed the southern tip of Florida then headed into the Gulf of Mexico. AP’s Hurricane Tracker (flash file) | AP’s Katrina’s Impact (flash file)
Katrina in Florida • Facts: • Deaths: Eleven • Evacuations: As the storm aimed at the Gulf Coast, people on Navarre Beach, Pensacola Beach and Perdido Key were urged to evacuate.
Katrina in Florida • Facts: • Power outages: • Some 28,000 homes and businesses were without power in the Panhandle. • About 314,000 residential and business customers in South Florida remained without power from the earlier strike.
Katrina in Florida • Facts: • Damage: • Initial computer modeling estimates pegged the insured wind damage from the first strike at $600 million to $2 billion. • When the storm made landfall Aug. 29 in Louisiana, its fringes flooded streets in the Florida Panhandle and eroded beaches.
Keena Baker took this photo of waves hitting the Dan Russell Municipal Pier in Panama City Beach. The pier is still damaged from Hurricane Dennis that hit Florida in July. (cnn.com) Russell Crossey and his dog get a serious soaking Thursday on the north jetty of the Boynton Inlet in Manalapan, Florida, as huge waves, whipped up by Katrina, break against the wall. (cnn.com) Katrina in Florida • Storm waves
Katrina in Florida Flooding This south Miami Heights neighborhood is sinking in floods after a visit from Hurricane Katrina. (cnn.com) South Miami-Dade County as seen during a fire department aerial reconnaissance mission in the wake of Hurricane Katrina on August 26, 2005.Photograph courtesy Lt. Eric Baum/Miami-Dade Fire Rescue (nationalgeographic.com)
August 29: LouisianaCategory 4 August 25-26: FloridaCategory 1
Katrina in the Gulf States cbsnews.com
(cnn.com) (Mario Tama/Getty Images) (cnn.com) Katrina in the Gulf States • Emergency Shelter • Not everyone could evacuate • 10,000+ people took shelter in the Louisiana Superdome
Louisiana Superdome Before After
(Frank Polich/Reuters) Katrina in the Gulf States • Emergency Shelter • Marci Romagnoli of the Gulfport Oceanarium in Gulfport, Miss., feeds three dolphins in a swimming pool at a local hotel. • Officials at the oceanarium moved the dolphins inland to safety.
Katrina in the Gulf States • Emergency Shelter • Those who stayed relocated to the Convention Center • Superdome eventually had to be evacuated due to rising water – but other areas were not included in evacuation plan
A casino barge sits among homes in Biloxi (Photo: AP) (cbsnews.com) The storm surge from Hurricane Katrina floods a parking lot in downtown Mobile, Ala. (AP Photo/Michelle Rolls, Mobile Register) Katrina in the Gulf States • Storm Surge • 20+ feet (6 m) at Louisiana / Mississippi border • 10 feet (3 m) at Mobile Bay, Alabama
Storm Surge A casino barge damaged by Hurricane Katrina sits on the road Wednesday, Aug. 31, 2005, in Gulfport, Miss. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip) A boat sits among trailers damaged by Hurricane Katrina Wednesday, Aug. 31, 2005, in Gulfport, Miss. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip) The I-90 bridge over St. Louis Bay is the end of the road after the high winds and waves of Hurricane Katrina hit the area destroying the bridge.(AFP/Paul J. Richards) Katrina in the Gulf States
Trees litter New Orleans streets after Hurricane Katrina pounded the city on Aug. 29, 2005. (Dave Martin/AP Photo) (abcnews.com) Debris from the storm in Mississippi. (Mississippi Press-Register, William Colgin/AP Photo) (abcnews.com) Katrina in the Gulf States • High Winds
Katrina in the Gulf States cbsnews.com
Katrina in the Gulf States cnn.com
Katrina in the Gulf States Urban Flooding Floodwaters from Hurricane Katrina fill the streets near downtown New Orleans Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2005 in New Orleans. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip) The Mound Underpass on Interstate 10 is flooded near downtown New Orleans on Monday. (cnn.com)
Katrina in the Gulf States Urban Flooding Residents wade through waist-deep water covering their neighborhood in New Orleans. (Chris Graythen/ Getty Images) (abcnews.com) A New Orleans city police car with its rear window broken is abandoned in flood waters on Canal Street in downtown New Orleans August 29, 2005, in advance of Hurricane Katrina. REUTERS/Rick Wilking (http://today.reuters.co.uk)
A toxic film spreads over the water near a flooded home in a lakeside area in New Orleans, Louisiana. (AFP/Getty Images/Dave Einsel) Oil slick in water surrounding a house in New Orleans (AFP/Pool/Vincent Laforet) Katrina in the Gulf States • Urban Flooding
REUTERS/Marc Serota Katrina in the Gulf States • Urban Flooding / Levee Failure
Structural Damage A toppled brick wall in the French Quarter. Photograph by Mario Tama/Getty Images (nationalgeographic.com An old building near the French Quarter in New Orleans is severely damaged by the storm Monday. (cnn.com) Katrina in the Gulf States
Structural Damage A run-away oil drilling platform called Ocean Warwick is washed ashore on the Dauphin Island shores in Alabama. High winds and waves of from Hurricane Katrina pushed it ashore. At least 20 oil rigs and platforms are missing in the Gulf of Mexico and a ruptured gas pipeline is on fire after Hurricane Katrina tore through the region, a US Coast Guard official said.(AFP/Paul J. Richards) Katrina in the Gulf States
Katrina in the Gulf States • Indirect effects • Lack of electricity / power • Lack of telecommunications • Lack of clean water • Lack of food / water / clothing / medicine • Lack of health care • Lack of employment
Katrina in the Gulf States • Indirect effects • Shelter compromised • Access to personal funds compromised • Increased “critter” activity (snakes, alligators)
Katrina in the Gulf States • Looting • Initially began as desperate people tried to get food/clothing • Descended into anarchy as aid was not administered quickly enough • Army and National Guard called in to help
Aid Relief cbsnews.com