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[測試] 3/19 汪踢板多PO結果已刪文
[ Test ]124 留言, 推噓總分: +1
作者: CodingMan - 發表於 2019/03/20 06:00(5年前)
1Flajji: 1896 Cedar Keys hurricane03/20 16:04
2Flajji: The 1896 Cedar Keys hurricane was a powerful and destru03/20 16:04
3Flajji: ctive tropical cyclone that devastated much of the East03/20 16:04
4Flajji: Coast of the United States, starting with Florida's Ce03/20 16:04
5Flajji: dar Keys, near the end of September 1896. The storm's r03/20 16:04
6Flajji: apid movement allowed it to maintain much of its intens03/20 16:04
7Flajji: ity after landfall and cause significant damage over a03/20 16:04
8Flajji: broad area; as a result, it became one of the costliest03/20 16:04
9Flajji: United States hurricanes at the time. The fourth tropi03/20 16:04
10Flajji: cal cyclone of the 1896 Atlantic hurricane season, it f03/20 16:04
11Flajji: ormed by September 22, likely from a tropical wave, bef03/20 16:04
12Flajji: ore crossing the Caribbean Sea just south of the Greate03/20 16:04
13Flajji: r Antilles. It entered the Gulf of Mexico as the equiva03/20 16:04
14Flajji: lent of a major hurricane on the Saffir–Simpson scale,03/20 16:04
15Flajji: and struck the Cedar Keys—an offshore island chain th03/20 16:04
16Flajji: at includes the island and city of Cedar Key—early on03/20 16:04
17Flajji: the morning of September 29 with winds of 125 mph (20503/20 16:04
18Flajji: km/h). The area was inundated by a devastating 10.5 ft03/20 16:04
19Flajji: (3.2 m) storm surge that undermined buildings, washed o03/20 16:04
20Flajji: ut the connecting railroad to the mainland, and submerg03/20 16:04
21Flajji: ed the smaller, outlying islands, where 31 people were03/20 16:04
22Flajji: killed. Strong winds also destroyed many of the red ced03/20 16:04
23Flajji: ar trees that played an important role in the economy o03/20 16:04
24Flajji: f the region.03/20 16:04
25Flajji: 1896 Cedar Key hurricane03/20 16:04
26Flajji: Category 3 major hurricane (SSHWS/NWS)03/20 16:04
27Flajji: September 29, 1896 hurricane weather map.jpg03/20 16:04
28Flajji: Surface weather analysis of the eastern United States o03/20 16:04
29Flajji: n September 29, showing the hurricane, denoted by "LOW"03/20 16:04
30Flajji: , and its associated precipitation (shading)03/20 16:04
31Flajji: FormedSeptember 22, 189603/20 16:04
32Flajji: DissipatedSeptember 30, 189603/20 16:04
33Flajji: Highest winds1-minute sustained: 125 mph (205 km/h)03/20 16:04
34Flajji: Lowest pressure960 mbar (hPa); 28.35 inHg03/20 16:04
35Flajji: Fatalities20203/20 16:04
36Flajji: Damage> $9.6 million (1896 USD)03/20 16:04
37Flajji: Areas affectedJamaica Cuba Florida Georgia03/20 16:04
38Flajji: the Carolinas Mid-Atlantic states New York Gr03/20 16:04
39Flajji: eat Lakes03/20 16:04
40Flajji: Part of the 1896 Atlantic hurricane season03/20 16:04
41Flajji: The cyclone continued inland over the Suwannee River va03/20 16:04
42Flajji: lley, causing widespread destruction in dozens of commu03/20 16:04
43Flajji: nities across interior northern Florida; in the hardest03/20 16:04
44Flajji: -hit settlements, intense winds left few trees or build03/20 16:04
45Flajji: ings standing. The hurricane razed 5,000 sq mi (13,00003/20 16:04
46Flajji: km2) of dense pine forests in northern Florida, crippli03/20 16:04
47Flajji: ng the turpentine industry. Crops and livestock were de03/20 16:04
48Flajji: stroyed, and thousands of individuals were left homeles03/20 16:04
49Flajji: s. The storm killed at least 70 people in mainland Flor03/20 16:04
50Flajji: ida, while inflicting approximately $3 million in prope03/20 16:04
51Flajji: rty damage across the state. Speeding north, the hurric03/20 16:04
52Flajji: ane ravaged southeastern Georgia and the Sea Islands. I03/20 16:04
53Flajji: n Savannah, a 45-minute onslaught of fierce winds unroo03/20 16:04
54Flajji: fed thousands of structures. Parks, cemeteries, and str03/20 16:04
55Flajji: eets in the city were littered with fallen trees, and t03/20 16:04
56Flajji: he Savannah River saw dozens of wrecked boats. At least03/20 16:05
57Flajji: 37 people in Georgia lost their lives. Strong winds an03/20 16:05
58Flajji: d high tides battered southeastern South Carolina, ruin03/20 16:05
59Flajji: ing rice crops and peeling off roofs. The storm then tr03/20 16:05
60Flajji: acked through mostly rural sectors of North Carolina an03/20 16:05
61Flajji: d did significant wind damage in the Raleigh–Durham ar03/20 16:05
62Flajji: ea.03/20 16:05
63Flajji: Although the hurricane was weakening and transitioning03/20 16:05
64Flajji: into an extratropical cyclone late on September 29, its03/20 16:05
65Flajji: rapid forward movement contributed to high wind veloci03/20 16:05
66Flajji: ties across parts of the Mid-Atlantic states, with gust03/20 16:05
67Flajji: s approaching 100 mph (160 km/h). Additionally, torrent03/20 16:05
68Flajji: ial rains fell west of the storm's track. In Virginia,03/20 16:05
69Flajji: cities and agricultural districts alike suffered extens03/20 16:05
70Flajji: ive damage. Flash flooding in the Shenandoah Valley cul03/20 16:05
71Flajji: minated in the failure of an earthen dam upstream from03/20 16:05
72Flajji: Staunton, unleashing a torrent of water that swept home03/20 16:05
73Flajji: s from their foundations and ravaged the town's commerc03/20 16:05
74Flajji: e district. In Washington, D.C., thousands of trees wer03/20 16:05
75Flajji: e uprooted or snapped, communications were severed, and03/20 16:05
76Flajji: localized streaks of violent gusts damaged many public03/20 16:05
77Flajji: and private buildings. The White House grounds were le03/20 16:05
78Flajji: ft in disarray. High tides in the Chesapeake Bay trigge03/20 16:05
79Flajji: red flooding in coastal cities. In Pennsylvania, floodi03/20 16:05
80Flajji: ng rains and powerful wind gusts produced widespread de03/20 16:05
81Flajji: struction. Railroads in western parts of the state were03/20 16:05
82Flajji: plagued by washouts and landslides, while in southeast03/20 16:05
83Flajji: ern areas, hundreds of barns were destroyed. The storm03/20 16:05
84Flajji: totally demolished a 5,390 ft (1,640 m) bridge over the03/20 16:05
85Flajji: Susquehanna River, while the Gettysburg Battlefield lo03/20 16:05
86Flajji: st hundreds of trees, a few of which struck and damaged03/20 16:05
87Flajji: historical monuments. Strong winds extended as far eas03/20 16:05
88Flajji: t as Long Island. Heavy rainfall reached west into Ohio03/20 16:05
89Flajji: , and the hurricane's extratropical remnants wrought ha03/20 16:05
90Flajji: voc on shipping in the Great Lakes. Along the storm's p03/20 16:05
91Flajji: ath, it caused at least 202 deaths and wrought more tha03/20 16:05
92Flajji: n $9.6 million in damage.03/20 16:05
93Flajji: Meteorological history03/20 16:05
94Flajji: Map plotting the track and the intensity of the storm,03/20 16:05
95Flajji: according to the Saffir–Simpson scale03/20 16:05
96Flajji: Although little is known about the system prior to its03/20 16:05
97Flajji: passage through the Leeward Islands as a tropical storm03/20 16:05
98Flajji: on September 22,[1] it likely originated from a tropic03/20 16:05
99Flajji: al wave that exited the western coast of Africa.[2] Its03/20 16:05
100Flajji: track has been re-analyzed multiple times since the ea03/20 16:05
101Flajji: rly 20th century.[3] For several days, the storm moved03/20 16:05
102Flajji: westward through the northern Caribbean Sea, passing ju03/20 16:05
103Flajji: st south of Jamaica as a low-end hurricane on September03/20 16:05
104Flajji: 25. The cyclone steadily intensified, turned northward03/20 16:05
105Flajji: , and moved through the Yucatán Channel on September 203/20 16:05
106Flajji: .[1] The aftermath of the storm in western Cuba was con03/20 16:05
107Flajji: sistent with the effects of a Category 1 hurricane on t03/20 16:05
108Flajji: he modern-day Saffir–Simpson scale, suggesting that th03/20 16:05
109Flajji: e storm was a major hurricane of Category 3 intensity w03/20 16:05
110Flajji: hile passing west of the island.[4] As the storm entere03/20 16:05
111Flajji: d the Gulf of Mexico, it began to accelerate and curve03/20 16:05
112Flajji: toward the north-northeast.[1]03/20 16:05
113Flajji: In the early morning on September 29,[2] the center of03/20 16:05
114Flajji: the hurricane made landfall on Cedar Key, Florida, with03/20 16:05
115Flajji: a minimum central pressure of 960 mb (28.35 inHg), and03/20 16:05
116Flajji: moved inland across Levy County. The cyclone possessed03/20 16:05
117Flajji: an unusually tight core, with a 17 mi (27 km) radius o03/20 16:06
118Flajji: f maximum wind, and was traveling at a swift pace of ab03/20 16:06
119Flajji: out 35 mph (55 km/h). Consequently, its estimated maxim03/20 16:06
120Flajji: um winds of 125 mph (205 km/h) were higher than pressur03/20 16:06
121Flajji: e alone would suggest.[4] The small but intense hurrica03/20 16:06
122Flajji: ne continued northeastward through northern Florida and03/20 16:06
123Flajji: southeastern Georgia, and its core contracted further;03/20 16:06
124Flajji: outside of a narrow corridor along the storm's track,03/20 16:06
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