Storm Warnings
Is global warming to blame for the intensity of recent Atlantic hurricanes? While experts debate that question, they agree that more devastating tempests are headed our way.
- By J. Madeleine Nash
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2006, Subscribe
(Page 6 of 6)
In an era overshadowed by the specter of large-scale climate change, the past may appear an inadequate guide to the future, but it’s the only one we have. Certainly, there is no reason to think that major hurricanes, some as powerful as the 1935 Labor Day storm, won't continue to strike the U.S. coastline at least as often as before. And that fact alone—independent of any increase in hurricane intensity—affords ample reason for concern. The destructive potential of hurricanes, it's important to keep in mind, does not stem solely from their intrinsic power. No less important is America's love affair with waterfront living. From Texas to Maine, the coastal population now stands at 52 million, versus less than 10 million a century ago. On average, there are 160 people per square mile in hurricane belt states versus 61 per square mile in the rest of the country.
Adjusted for inflation, the 1938 New England hurricane destroyed or damaged some $3.5 billion worth of property. Today, estimates Roger Pielke Jr., a professor of environmental studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder, the same hurricane would leave behind a tab of up to $50 billion. The 1900 Galveston hurricane would cause property losses as high as $120 billion. And at the very top of Pielke's list of catastrophic disasters is a replay of the Category 4 hurricane that slashed into Miami in 1926, eighty years ago this September. Were the same hurricane to hit the Miami area in 2006, Pielke estimates, the bill could approach $180 billion. "And," he adds, "if you want to compare apples to apples, Katrina was an $80 billion storm."
In 1926, Miami was just coming off a growth spurt; the city bustled with transplants from the north who had never experienced a hurricane before. As the eye passed overhead, hundreds of these innocents spilled into the streets to gawk, prompting Richard Gray, the horrified chief of the city's Weather Bureau, to run out of his office, screaming at people to take cover. By the time the storm ended, at least 300 people had died and property damage was estimated at $76 million, around $700 million in today's dollars. "The intensity of the storm and the wreckage that it left cannot be adequately described," Gray later recalled. "The continuous roar of the wind; the crash of falling buildings, flying debris and plate glass; the shriek of fire apparatus and ambulances that rendered assistance until the streets became impassable."
Before leaving Miami, I take a last drive through the downtown area, which is in the midst of yet another building boom, its skyline spiky with cranes that loom over streets and sidewalks like mechanical dinosaurs. Showcase buildings designed by famous architects—including Cesar Pelli's Performing Arts Center and Frank Gehry's concert hall for the New World Symphony—are rising toward the sky. Today Miami-Dade County has a population approaching 2.5 million, 25 times its 1926 number. Neighboring Broward County, which had not quite 15,000 residents 80 years ago, is fast approaching the 2 million mark. The air is hot, steamy, swelling with clouds.
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Comments (1)
interesting really interesting...i want to know more and to join you guys of what your doing i want to be part in evry dive done...im from Philippines and really interested to experience thisng like what i see under water in this site....if you need a person or just an asistand i can bolontier.....thanks alot........
Posted by James Lou Lanaja on November 22,2007 | 02:39 PM