History, asked by lolowahaltwaijiry, 4 months ago

Hurricane katrina commonlit answers no spam just answers please.

Answers

Answered by stpatil21
1

Answer:

hurricane Katrina was a hurricane formed due to low pressure belt and heavy rainfall in indian Ocean .

it struck the coast of bay of Bengal and arabian sea too. tamilnadu , Kerala , andhrapradesh , Odisha , west bengal suffered a lot .it had devastating effect on overall ecosystem and caused great loss of human life and property. it strucked to Indonesia , Malaysia and Sri Lanka too.

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Answered by MananyaMuhury
1

Answer and Explanation:

Hurricane Katrina made landfall off the coast of Louisiana on August 29, 2005. It hit land as a Category 3 storm with winds reaching speeds as high as 120 miles per hour. Because of the ensuing destruction and loss of life, the storm is often considered one of the worst in U.S. history. An estimated 1,200 people died as a direct result of the storm, which also cost an estimated $108 billion in property damage, making it the costliest storm on record.

The devastating aftermath of Hurricane Katrina exposed a series of deep-rooted problems, including controversies over the federal government's response, difficulties in search-and-rescue efforts, and lack of preparedness for the storm, particularly with regard to the city's aging series of levees—50 of which failed during the storm, significantly flooding the low-lying city and causing much of the damage. Katrina's victims tended to be low income and African American in disproportionate numbers, and many of those who lost their homes faced years of hardship.

Ten years after the disaster, then-President Barack Obama said of Katrina, "What started out as a natural disaster became a man-made disaster—a failure of government to look out for its own citizens."

The city of New Orleans and other coastal communities in Katrina's path remain significantly altered more than a decade after the storm, both physically and culturally. The damage was so extensive that some pundits had argued, controversially, that New Orleans should be permanently abandoned, even as the city vowed to rebuild. The population of New Orleans fell by more than half in the year after Katrina, according to Data Center Research. As of this writing, the population had grown back to nearly 80 percent of where it was before the hurricane.

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