Craters wrote:kevin wrote:An overview of all Texas/Louisiana August MH landfalls for reference. Stats are regarding landfalling pressure/wind, so not always peak values. Some more statistics:
*Since 1851 there have been 18 MH August landfalls in Texas/Louisiana, which results in an average return period of roughly 9.5 years.
*In the same period there have been 7 cat 4 landfalls, so for an August cat 4+ landfall the return period is roughly 24 years.
*No hurricane (at least since 1851) has ever made landfall as a cat 5 in Texas/Louisiana in August. However, based on a Gaussian distribution (which approximates the return periods quite well for a cat 3 and cat 4), the expected return period would be roughly 650 years. So pretty much never.
Year / Storm / LF category / LF pressure (mb) / LF wind (kt)
2020 / Laura / 4 / 938 / 130
2017 / Harvey / 4 / 937 / 115
2005 / Katrina / 3 / 920 / 110
1999 / Bret / 3 / 951 / 100
1992 / Andrew / 3 / 956 / 100
1983 / Alicia / 3 / 962 / 100
1980 / Allen / 3 / 945 / 100
1970 / Celia / 3 / 945 / 110
1945 / Unnamed / 3 / 963 / 100
1942 / Unnamed / 3 / 950 / 100
1932 / Unnamed / 4 / 935 / 130
1926 / Unnamed / 3 / 955 / 100
1918 / Unnamed / 3 / 955 / 105
1916 / Unnamed / 4 / 932 / 115
1915 / Unnamed / 4 / 940 / 115
1886 / Unnamed / 4 / 925 / 130
1860 / Unnamed / 3 / ??? / 110
1856 / Unnamed / 4 / 934 / 130
It's still incomprehensible to me that Ike isn't on that list. Goes to show that the definition of a major hurricane could use some adjustment.
Ike was in September but it was only 1 MPH off of being a cat 3.