oatjay Posted August 29, 2005 Posted August 29, 2005 the water breached a levee in new orleans east- there's a big chunk of land there under 8-10 feet of water. apparently there are bodies floating in the water there and at least 200 people or so waiting for rescue from their roof. just about no one has power and it could be out for a month. no news on when anyone will be able to get back. personally, i don't know what's happening with my home. all i know is that a building was destroyed less than 5 miles from my house. no idea if there is any flooding, though. my 80-year-old neighbor stayed behind and we can't get in touch with him. your prayers are appreciated.
Severian Posted August 29, 2005 Posted August 29, 2005 APOD has an incredible picture of Katrina' date=' taken this afternoon by GOES 12. http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap050829.html I can't get over the size of the thing. At one point the feeder bands were stretching from Cancun, Mexico to Gainesville, Florida (way north of Orlando). Unbelievable.[/quote'] I think I will use that in my enviromental lecture course (to show hurricanes always rotate anti-clockwise in the northern hemisphere). The previous piccy I showed last year wasn't nearly as good.
flyboy Posted August 29, 2005 Posted August 29, 2005 the hurricane didnt hit new orleans as hard as it could of the cities under 4ft of water when they estimated about 30, the city still has the problem with refineries and having the city be a huge toxic lake
CPL.Luke Posted August 30, 2005 Posted August 30, 2005 really I'm seeing on the news right now that new orleans is pretty much underwater with parts of the city covered with 25 feet of water. however the winds only hit the city at 95, about a cat 2.
Rakdos Posted August 30, 2005 Posted August 30, 2005 I live in central Indiana and we are getting hit by the outer edges of Katrina now and probably will stay for the next couple of days
oatjay Posted August 31, 2005 Posted August 31, 2005 another levee broke last night- water's going to rise untit it reaches the level of lake pontchartrain- which is at 3 feet above sea level. the entire east bank of the city will be under water in a few hours.
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