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| Discuss what's fucking going on, and which programs are best and worst. One-time "program" announcements from "established" webmasters are allowed. |
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#1 |
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Confirmed User
Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 2,047
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Even at 115 mph the levees will be overtopped.
http://www.nola.com/newslogs/breakin...08.html#074545 National Hurricane Center Director Max Mayfield said Saturday afternoon that Hurricane Katrina will be at least a Category 4, with winds of 145 mph when it approaches the New Orleans area, and that it could be a Category 5, with winds of 155 mph or higher. Meanwhile, computer model runs conducted by a team of Louisiana State University scientists indicate that even if Katrina had winds of only 115 mph, levees protecting Kenner, Metairie and New Orleans on the east bank will be overtopped by a 10- to 12-foot storm surge, topped by waves at least half that high, in some locations along Lake Pontchartrain. "The guidance we get and common sense and experience suggests this storm is not done strengthening," Mayfield said in a telephone call from Miami-Dade County, which was hit by a Category 1 Katrina earlier in the week. "This is really scary," he said. "This is not a test, as your governor said earlier today. This is the real thing." Mayfield warned residents intent on not leaving in advance of Katrina to learn from the storm's effects in south Florida. "We think this was a solid Category 1 when it made landfall here," he said. "But we had windows in new homes that blew in when they were designed for 145 mph winds." Mayfield also warned people not to focus on the eye of the storm, as atmospheric conditions are perfect for Katrina's intensity to stretch far to the east and west of its eye. "This thing is like Hurricane Opal," he said, referring to a huge 1995 hurricane that hit the Florida panhandle as a Category 3 storm. "We're seeing 12-foot seas along the Louisiana coast already." .... Oh boy |
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#2 |
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Outside looking in.
Industry Role:
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: To Hell You Ride
Posts: 14,243
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Yeah, if you didn't see N.O. before today you will never see what it was like. I can't see it ever being the same. With all that water in the city there will be so much contamination and all those graveyards where everyone is burried above ground will be disturbed. Bones and bodies everywhere floating in the city. Very sad. Lets hope for the best but even the best is not good news.
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#3 |
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Bon temps!
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: down yonder
Posts: 14,194
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The levees won't be toppled by the winds, it will be the storm surge. Last hurricane I rode out had 115mph winds, but there was no storm surge. Lots of damage but not total destruction.
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#4 |
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Confirmed User
Join Date: Jun 2001
Posts: 145
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it looks like its going to hook right
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Tomorrow is another day. |
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#5 | |
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Bon temps!
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: down yonder
Posts: 14,194
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Quote:
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