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Hurricanes, Floods, and Blizzards

Exploring the characteristics, causes, effects, and control measures of hurricanes, floods, and blizzards. Learn about storm surges, flash floods, and blizzard conditions. Discover how these natural disasters impact communities worldwide.

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Hurricanes, Floods, and Blizzards

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  1. Hurricanes, Floods, and Blizzards

  2. Tropical Storms Larger • ______, but less intense than tornadoes. • ____ pressure areas. • Rotates __________________ in the northern hemisphere. • Average _______ miles in diameter. • Last for days or weeks. • Wind speed is ____ to ____ mph. • _______ winds and heavy rain. Low counterclockwise 400 38 74 Strong

  3. Hurricane Formation hurricane • In order for a ___________ to form, there must be a supply of warm, moist air for a long period of time. • ___________ that evaporates from the ocean condenses in the clouds. • This process releases heat. • The _______ fuels the development of a hurricane. • When hurricanes reach ________ there is no longer a water source and the hurricane weakens. Water heat land

  4. How do we know what it is?

  5. Hurricane • Around the United States and the Caribbean it is called a ___________. • In the western Pacific Ocean it is called a ___________. • In the Indian Ocean it is called a ___________. • A tropical storm is officially a hurricane when it reaches surface winds of ____ mph. • This is the most __________ storm on Earth. hurricane typhoon cyclone 75 powerful

  6. What is it called?

  7. Hurricane Near the equator Atlantic Ocean • Tropical storms form in the tropics (__________________). • In the ________________ the formation is off the coast of Africa.

  8. Parts of a Hurricane Eye • _____- The center of the hurricane. • Cloud-free • Sinking, dry air in middle • 20-40 miles wide • Thick, ________________ clouds spiral outward from the eye. cumulonimbus

  9. Parts of a Hurricane

  10. Hurricane effects Storm surge • _______________- When the storm reaches shore, strong winds and abnormally high water level caused by low pressure create a storm surge that floods coastal areas. • Hurricane Katrina had a storm surge of ___ feet. (New Orleans, 2005) 28

  11. Hurricane categories Saffir-Simpson Scale

  12. Tropical Storm and Hurricane names tropical storm • When the storm becomes a ________________ it is given a name. • Names in alphabetical order. (Not Q, U, X, Y, Z) • If there are more than 21 storms in a year, the Greek alphabet is used. (Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta….) • Lists are reused every six years. • When there is major death and destruction the name is retired.

  13. Tropical Storm and Hurricane names • g

  14. Tropical Storm and Hurricane forecast by Colorado State University June November • Hurricane season is _____ through ____________.

  15. Hurricanes in the United States

  16. Hurricane Maria – Puerto Rico 2017 Category 4 • ____________ when it hit Puerto Rico. • Sustained winds of 175 mph. • Caused $90 billion in damage. • 3,057 died. • Still rebuilding.

  17. Hurricane Maria – Puerto Rico 2017

  18. Hurricane Katrina – New Orleans and nearby 2005 • Category ___. • 28 feet storm surge. • Caused $125 billion in damage. • ~1,600 died. • 80% of New Orleans was flooded. 5

  19. Hurricane Katrina – New Orleans and nearby 2005

  20. Floods capacity • When a river exceeds the ___________ of its channel, it overflows its banks. • Floods are the most common and most _______________ of all geologic hazards. • The stream overflows onto low-lying adjacent land called the _____________. destructive Floodplain

  21. Causes of Floods • Rivers flood because of the ____________. • Rapidly ______________ and/or _____________ with heavy rains over a large region cause most floods. • Floods may also be caused when ________ and _________ break. weather melting snow major storms dams levees

  22. Flood Control levees • Artificial ____________ may be built. Earthen mounds built on the banks of a river to increase the volume of the channel. • The stream may rise above the ___________ and be contained in the levees. floodplain

  23. Flood Control levee • If the _______ is breached the entire stream would flow out and cause a huge flood.

  24. Flood Control Flood-control dams • _____________________ are built to store floodwater and then let it out slowly.

  25. Flood Control Channelization • ________________ involves altering a stream channel in order to speed the flow of water to prevent it from reaching flood height. • This may be clearing a channel of obstructions or dredging a channel to make it wider or deeper.

  26. Flash Floods Flash floods torrential • ____________ are local floods of great volume and short duration. • Flash floods usually result from _________ rains associated with slow-moving severe thunderstorms or a sequence of smaller storms. • More common in the ___________ where the slope is steep. • Flash floods are the leading cause of storm related deaths. More than half of the deaths are auto related. • Large rivers __________ have flash floods. mountains do not

  27. Blizzard Blizzard • _________ - A dangerous winter storm with high wind, snow, and low visibility. • A winter storm is considered a blizzard when: • Sustained _______ of 35 mph. • Falling and/or blowing snow causing ___________ of less than ¼ mile. • The conditions must last at least ______________________. wind visibility 3 consecutive hours

  28. Blizzard 27.5 • The January 23, 2016 blizzard in New York City was the largest snowfall on record in Central Park. There was an accumulation of _____ inches of snow, with blizzard conditions lasting for seven hours during the peak of the storm!

  29. Largest blizzards in Chicago • January 26-27, 1967- There was 23 inches of snow. • January 1-3, 1999- There was 21.6 inches of snow and 20 below zero temperatures. • Jan 31 – Feb 2, 2011- There was 21.2 inches of snow. 900 cars and buses were stranded on Lake Shore Drive. • January 12-14, 1979- There was 20.3 inches of snow.

  30. Blizzard of 1967

  31. Blizzard of 2011

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