Hurricane Flora: Difference between revisions
Pressure |
update infobox |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
<!-- Find a picture and remove the "nopic" from this template! -->{{infobox hurricane |
<!-- Find a picture and remove the "nopic" from this template! -->{{infobox hurricane | name=Hurricane Flora |
||
| |
| formed=[[September 26]], [[1963]] |
||
| dissipated=[[October 12]], [[1963]] |
|||
| highest winds=140 [[miles per hour|mph]] (225 km/h) |
| highest winds=140 [[miles per hour|mph]] (225 km/h) |
||
| lowest pressure=940 [[mbar]] ([[hPa]]) |
| lowest pressure=940 [[mbar]] ([[hPa]]) |
||
| total damages |
| total damages=$3.2 billion ([[2005]] dollars) |
||
| total fatalities=7,193 direct |
| total fatalities=7,193 direct |
||
| areas affected=[[Lesser Antilles]], [[Haiti]], [[Cuba]] |
| areas affected=[[Lesser Antilles]], [[Haiti]], [[Cuba]] |
Revision as of 00:59, 29 December 2005
Formed | September 26, 1963 |
---|---|
Dissipated | October 12, 1963 |
Hurricane Flora blasted through the Caribbean in September and October, 1963. Flora was one of the deadliest hurricanes in history, killing over 7,000.
Storm history
A tropical depression formed on September 26 in the Central Atlantic, developing from a disturbance in the Intertropical Convergence Zone. The depression moved rapidly west-northwestward, which helped prevent intensification. On the 29th, it began to rapidly intensify, becoming a tropical storm that day, and a 120 mph Category 3 by the 30th. Flora moved through the Leeward Islands, first striking the island of Tobago. Flora then crossed the Caribbean Sea and strengthened to a Category 4 hurricane, peaking at 140 mph winds.
Flora struck the southwest peninsula of Haiti on October 4 as a 140 mph hurricane, causing heavy rains. The Dominican Republic was luckier, but still was hit with flooding. Flora hit southeast Cuba near Guantanamo Bay also on the 4th, but a high pressure system to its north and another to its west caused Flora to drift over Cuba. It reached the Caribbean again on the 6th, but it again hit Cuba on the 7th. A shortwave trough finally pulled Flora to the northeast, bringing the hurricane into the Atlantic Ocean on the 8th. Flora steadily strengthened to a 115 mph major hurricane on the 10th, but cooler water temperatures weakened Flora until it became extratropical on the 12th.
Impact
The hurricane caused such great damage in Tobago that it changed the economy of the island from cash-crop agriculture towards tourism and fishing. Heavy crop damage was reported in Haiti, with smaller amounts of damage in Dominican Republic.
Flora left 7,193 people dead in Haiti and Cuba, making it one of the five deadliest hurricanes in Atlantic history. In addition, Flora caused a total of $528,500,000 in damage (1963 dollars).
The name Flora was retired and will never be used for a hurricane again; this name was replaced by Freda in 1967.
See also
External links
- http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/general/lib/lib1/nhclib/1963.pdf (Monthly Weather Summary)