Hurricane Katrina, Gulf Coast
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The National Hurricane Center continued to track Tropical Storm Fernand in the central Atlantic on Monday, but the Gulf remained very quiet as the peak of the Atlantic hurricane season approaches. There were no storms expected to develop in the Gulf in at least the next seven days, according to hurricane center forecasts.
Katrina shows what can happen at the peak of hurricane season, which we are now in. But take comfort this September will start quietly.
This Friday, August 29, marks 20 years since Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast. We look back at one of the costliest and deadliest storms to strike the United States.
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When Did Hurricane Katrina Make Landfall? Revisiting the Devastating Natural Disaster 20 Years Later
Hurricane Katrina made landfall two decades ago, and its devastation continues to shape New Orleans. Here's everything to know about when Hurricane Katrina hit and what happened in the weeks following.
Modern technology has given meteorologists more detail than they’ve ever had on how storms behave. Here’s what they’re doing with it.
In late August 2005, Hurricane Katrina devastated the U.S. Gulf Coast. The storm cut a deadly swath through Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, deluging coastal towns as surges of ocean water swept relentlessly ashore,
Twenty years ago, a weather.com meteorologist was on shift the morning Hurricane Katrina made its catastrophic landfall. This is what he remembers most, both on the day of landfall and in the days before and after.
As the Gulf disturbance moves inland, tropical moisture will surge Friday and Saturday in the Houston metro area, leading to increasing storm chances.
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WJTV on MSNHurricane Katrina’s aftermath: A journey of recovery
This week, we’ve been looking back 20 years ago to Hurricane Katrina and the immediate aftermath of its landfall on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. I spent a great
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AP Newsroom on MSNA Mississippi city's tax break spurred post-Katrina building. But will homes stand the next storm?
After Hurricane Katrina devastated the Mississippi Gulf Coast, the City of Gulfport gave tax breaks to people and businesses looking to build back. But, 20 years after the storm, some worry the recovery could lead to another disaster.