milankovitch wrote:Derek Ortt wrote:the 1938 hurricane was a 5 east of hat. It weakened to a 105KT 3 in the 7 hours it took to reach Long Island
a 3 hitting NYC will devastate NJ, ALL of Long Island and Conn as well. Be prepared for dramatic changes of the American way of life after that as damage may reach into the trillions, and the deaths will likely be in the hundreds of thousands
Trillions of dollars in damage? Hundereds of thousands dead? What study is that from, because that seems to be a GROSS exaggeration to me.
I agree. Official damages from Katrina are 75 billion...so for the number to exceed a trillion dollars..we would need to see most of the metro area of the NE destroyed (completely). The only way I could see a trillion dollars being reached would be a Cat. 5 grazing by DC with 110mph gusts at the capitol building (to the left of the eye), and then it would need to move right along the coast of New Jersey and Rhode Island before making landfall in New York City as a Strong Cat. 3, but with a Cat. 5 surge. The surge would flood much of the city and the winds would blow out many windows, as well as damage homes, businesses and other items. Wind gusts would top 150mph at the NYC airports. Finally, the storm would move into Conneticut and Massachusatts and reach Boston as a weakening Cat. 1, enough to knock down some trees, take off some shingles, down signs and blow out a few windows. After moving back out to sea it would maintain 80-90mph as it became extratropical. It would then skirt up along Maine leading to beach erosion and wind damage to all coastal cities. All and all, I do not even think that scenario would reach a trillion...may be 500 billion..but for a trillion we would need to see a Cat. 5 in NYC (after hitting another major city) which has about a 1 in 1,000,000,000,000,000 chance of happening.