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re: Do the cooler waters of the Mississippi River turn most storms?
Posted on 9/14/20 at 7:32 pm to Nutriaitch
Posted on 9/14/20 at 7:32 pm to Nutriaitch
Literally nobody gives a frick about plaquemines parish and it was the area hit the hardest by Katrina
Posted on 9/14/20 at 7:32 pm to NeonSunburst
quote:
Wow. Your ignorant
Posted on 9/14/20 at 7:35 pm to Bmath
quote:
No, sea surface temperatures have more to do with intensity of the storm. Storm movement is based largely on positioning of nearby high and low pressure systems.
Finally.
Posted on 9/14/20 at 7:51 pm to theantiquetiger
The Gulf water gets shallow closer to land providing less fuel for storm. That is why they typically lose strength just before land fall. Maybe the cooler water emptying near delta provides less fuel too.
This post was edited on 9/14/20 at 7:52 pm
Posted on 9/14/20 at 7:52 pm to NeonSunburst
quote:
Wow. Your ignorant
It literally never fails
Posted on 9/14/20 at 8:40 pm to NeonSunburst
quote:
Your ignorant
Welp...
Posted on 9/14/20 at 8:42 pm to Loup
quote:
Uhh pretty sure Katrina only impacted New Orleans.
Uhh...hope you're trolling.
Posted on 9/14/20 at 8:46 pm to OysterPoBoy
quote:
There’s also a lot of fertilizer runoff in the river.
That just strengthens the hurricanes before they turn east.
Posted on 9/14/20 at 8:50 pm to theantiquetiger
Katrina passed through three Louisiana Parishes before it hit Mississippi: Plaquemines, St. Bernard, and St. Tammany.
This post was edited on 9/14/20 at 8:54 pm
Posted on 9/14/20 at 8:52 pm to CrownTownHalo
LINK
Louisiana has since surpassed North Carolina on this list.
quote:
Let’s take a look at the rest of the top 10. From the hurricanes seasons of 1851 to 2018, these are the top 10 hurricane states on record:
1. Florida: 120 hurricanes (37 were Category 3 through Category 5)
2. Texas 64 hurricanes (19 were Category 3 through Category 5)
3. North Carolina: 55 hurricanes (7 were Category 3 through Category 5)
4. Louisiana: 54 hurricanes (17 were Category 3 through Category 5)
5. South Carolina: 30 hurricanes (5 were Category 3 through Category 5)
6. Alabama 24 hurricanes (5 were Category 3 through Category 5)
7. Georgia 22 hurricanes (3 were Category 3 through Category 5)
8. Mississippi 19 hurricanes (8 were Category 3 through Category 5)
9. New York: 15 hurricanes (3 were Category 3 through Category 5)
10. Massachusetts 12 hurricanes (1 was a Category 3)
Louisiana has since surpassed North Carolina on this list.
This post was edited on 9/14/20 at 9:02 pm
Posted on 9/14/20 at 9:08 pm to Tchefuncte Tiger
quote:
Katrina passed through three Louisiana Parishes before it hit Mississippi: Plaquemines, St. Bernard, and St. Tammany.
The river warms up the further south it goes.
Posted on 9/14/20 at 9:15 pm to CrownTownHalo
quote:
Camille hit MS..
True, just stating it went right at the mouth with no fricks given
Posted on 9/14/20 at 9:16 pm to theantiquetiger
quote:
I know it’s usually the Lows and Highs that steer it, but it seems most smaller hurricanes turn away from SE Louisiana at the last minute.
You seem to be underestimating Our Lady of Prompt Succor. She saved New Orleans from Packenham and the invading Red Coats and she blocks those hurricanes better than the Saints offensive line!
This post was edited on 9/14/20 at 9:55 pm
Posted on 9/14/20 at 9:28 pm to theantiquetiger
Katrina hit Miss. coast, not LA.
Are you retarded??
Are you retarded??
Posted on 9/14/20 at 10:04 pm to Loup
quote:
Uhh pretty sure Katrina only impacted New Orleans
Alright idiots there are two things at play here. Too much attention is given to where the eye makes landfall. If you know anything about hurricanes you know that the northeast quadrant packs the biggest punch as far as tornadoes, heavy rain, and length of heavy rain. The wall of the eye brings the strongest winds and storm surge. Also to the northeast is where the storm turns as is ushered out by fronts passing in from the west.
Katrina devastated NOLA but MS took a pretty damn big punch. I believe it was still a Cat 1 by the time it went over Starkville. From talking to boomers I've heard the only thing that saved them from heavy damage was Camile. That storm was fresh in the mind of architects who were around when many of the buildings were built.
Posted on 9/14/20 at 10:05 pm to Paul Allen
quote:
600 degrees?
Why don't you play in the golf tournament?
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