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Nashville,Tennessee Flood. Katie Clark, Lauren Hayes, Neil. NASHVILLE FLOOD. As quoted “A city known for its music, tragedy took center stage” on May 2, 2010. Nashville, Tennessee hit by tornado and hurricane warnings ending in a result of flash flood and mass destruction.
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Nashville,Tennessee Flood Katie Clark, Lauren Hayes, Neil
NASHVILLE FLOOD • As quoted “A city known for its music, tragedy took center stage” on May 2, 2010. • Nashville, Tennessee hit by tornado and hurricane warnings ending in a result of flash flood and mass destruction.
What Causes Floods • Floods are caused by a back up in the water cycle. This occurs when more water is entering an area then can be taken away. Causes of floods include: • Heavy, intense rainfall • run-off from a deep snow cover • Ground cannot hold anymore water • A high river line • Urbanization of parking lots
Damages done by Nashville flooding • More than 13 inches of rain flooded streets, homes and city buildings • 31 people found dead • Over $4.1 million dollars of damage done to metropolitan area
Whats the connection… The facts: • When hurricanes weaken into tropical storms, mass amounts of rain occur. • Hurricanes are a triple punch: Heavy rainfall, heavy winds, and flying debris.
Industrial buildings, equipment and roads were submerged and destroyed. • Many vehicles lay uselessly blocks away from original destinations, caused from strong flow of water.
Natural flooding causes Nashville's Cumberland River to flood • The river winding through Nashville rose 12 feet above flood stage.
2,000 homes at the least were under water and destroyed by flood. • 2,600 people left homeless and thousands evacuated. • Majority of victims didn’t have flood insurance, since floodwaters weren’t plausible. • $1.5 billion in home damage.
Know the difference • Flood/Flash Flood Watch—Flooding or flash flooding is possible in your area. • Flood/Flash Flood Warning—Flooding or flash floods are already occurring in your area.
Safety Pack • Water • Food • Flashlight • Battery-powered or hand-crank radio • Extra batteries • First aid kit • Multi-purpose tool • Sanitation and personal hygiene items • Copies of personal documents • Family and emergency contact • information • Extra cash • Emergency blanket • Map(s) of the area • Tools/supplies for securing your home • Extra set of car keys and house keys • Extra clothing, hat and sturdy shoes • Rain gear • Camera for photos of damage
What do I do? • Listen to the weather reports. • Be ready to evacuate. • Head for higher ground • Do not walk in the flood water • If living in a flood prone area, get the insurance.
How can I prepare? • Have your emergency kit ready • Know the best route • Emergency contacts • Keep your vehicle fueled • Keep sandbags, plastic sheeting etc • Keep an itemized list • Have a family plan • Know how high your house sits off the ground
What about after? • Wait for officials to clear your home • Be careful of gas leaks • Do not step in the water if a power line is down • Approach entrances carefully