Ed Mahmoud wrote:Andrew92 wrote:Ed Mahmoud wrote:
Mitch wasn't a US storm (well, not until the very end).
It doesn't matter if it's a US storm or not. It still caused a lot of flooding, a lot of damage, and a death toll in the tens of thousands. Whether it happens in the US, Central America, or Antarctica, that's a tragedy no matter what.
15/8/4....almost on cue with my numbers. Just one named storm off, but hey, we'll see what happens! But as always, remember,
IT ONLY TAKES ONE.-Andrew92
I'm not sure you're reason for your morally superior lecture, as if you need to remind me people killed in other countries are also people.
I had said that the most recent deaths are freshwater statistic
in the US might not be valid post Katrina, and someone else mentioned a non-US storm. So I reminded him I was talking US storms.
How about reading up the thread before jumping to conclusions ansd trying to prove how you care next time.?.?
Point taken, and I'm not trying to lecture. I'll admit that maybe my argument was made a little harshly, and I agree, freshwater flooding does cause the most fatalities in the US.
But Mitch just goes to show that it doesn't matter whether or not the storm hits the US....freshwater flooding IS the cause of most deaths in hurricanes, and it can be anywhere. Fifi, Flora, Gordon, and Jeanne were similar instances; at least as far as I know, those storms were deadly where they were due to....freshwater flooding, and all of these cases were away from the US. Fifi because she was over the mountains, Flora because she stalled, Gordon I'm not entirely sure about (runoff from mountains maybe? somebody clue me in), and Jeanne caused major flooding and mudslides into a Haitian port city.
Now I could understand an argument that storm surge causes more deaths than freshwater flooding in a flatter third-world nation (i.e. Bangladesh). But when storms from the Atlantic hit land, they either hit the US which is usually well-warned and well-prepared (note I said usually, as sometimes a storm like Humberto just comes out of nowhere), or they hit mountainous Central America or any of the Caribbean islands, a number of which have substantial peaks (especially Hispaniola) that can cause the devastating floods and mudslides.
And NDG, to answer your question, storm surge DID cause a lot of deaths with Katrina. But IIRC, those deaths were primarily in Mississippi; there were more deaths in New Orleans due to freshwater flooding.
-Andrew92