From AOL/AccuWeather:
“Deadly and destructive:
Hurricane Milton by the numbers”
Hurricane Milton made landfall
near Siesta Key, Florida, at 8:30 p.m. EDT Wednesday. The storm has knocked out
power to millions of people in Florida and has caused at least 10 deaths. As
residents pick up the pieces, these are some of the astounding numbers
associated with the destructive storm. AccuWeather preliminarily estimates the
total damage and economic loss from historic Hurricane Milton will be between
$160 billion and $180 billion. After making landfall as a Category 3 hurricane,
a major hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson hurricane wind scale, Milton will go
down as one of the most damaging and impactful storms in Florida history, along
with Hurricane Helene's estimated total damage and economic loss of $225-250
billion just two weeks ago, which resulted in significant damage from the Gulf
Coast of Florida to the southern Appalachians, where a catastrophic flooding
disaster occurred.
Hurricane Milton is the fifth
hurricane to make landfall on the Gulf Coast this season, after Beryl, Debby,
Francine and Helene. The 2005 and 2020 hurricane seasons also had five. Only
the year 1886 had more, with six hurricanes making landfall in the Gulf that
season. Milton is the third hurricane to hit the state of Florida this year. No
other year on record has more than three. After an early pause, the 2024
Atlantic hurricane season is now above normal by all measures.
Although most customers in
Florida who lost power from Helene were restored before Milton approached,
100,000 customers had lost power in Florida because of the new storm by
Wednesday morning. As Hurricane Milton got closer to the coast, numbers spiked,
and 2.5 million had lost power by midnight. Outages were still going up
Thursday morning, eclipsing 3.5 million. Hardee and Highlands counties reported
that nearly 100% of customers were in the dark. In the wake of Hurricane
Milton, the death toll has risen to at least 10 people. St. Lucie County on
Florida's Atlantic coast has confirmed five deaths, attributed to tornadoes
that touched down during the storm, WPBF News reported. In St. Petersburg, police
confirmed two storm-related deaths. Volusia County has also reported
fatalities, with Sheriff Michael J. Chitwood confirming that three people died
in his jurisdiction.
At the St. Petersburg Albert
Whitted Airport, 18.87 inches of rain fell during Hurricane Milton. In just one
hour, the rain gauge recorded 5.09 inches, an extremely rare rainfall rate. As
Milton moved across Florida, an AccuWeather/Ambient Weather rain gauge recorded
16.67 inches at Lakeland, 32 miles northeast of Tampa. The storm surge at
Naples, Florida, reached 5.78 feet above normal tide, nearly a foot higher than
Hurricane Helene on Sept. 26 and almost 3 feet above Hurricane Debby on Aug. 4.
At Fort Myers, the gauge rose to 5.26 feet, slightly above the crest reached
during Hurricane Helene at 5.12, but short of the 50-year record set by
Hurricane Ian of 7.26 feet on Sept. 28, 2022. Instead of the water rising in
Tampa Bay, a tidal gauge downtown, just north of the storm's landfall where
winds were from the land, experienced a "blowout tide" or anti-storm
surge. This happens when high winds from a tropical storm or hurricane blow
from the land instead of the ocean, temporarily pushing water in bays out to
sea. The water level fell to nearly 5 feet below normal as winds blew water in
the bay out into the Atlantic Ocean. The strongest wind gust reported during
the storm was 105 mph at a WeatherFlow weather station in the Egmont Channel,
southwest of St. Petersburg. The Bradenton and St. Petersburg airports also
gusted to 102 and 101 mph, respectively.
National Weather Service offices
in Florida issued 126 tornado warnings as Hurricane Milton approached. There
were 45 tornadoes reported to the Storm Prediction Center. One tornado killed
several people in St. Lucie on the east coast of Florida. The record-holder for
tornadoes spawned by a hurricane is 120 with Hurricane Ivan in 2004. In 2023,
Hurricane Beryl spawned 68 twisters Hurricane Milton's central pressure fell to
26.64 inches of mercury (902 mb) on Oct. 8, making it the fifth-strongest
hurricane ever observed in the Atlantic Basin and the second-lowest for this
late in the year. Milton's sustained winds were estimated at 180 mph, and only
five Atlantic hurricanes have had estimated winds higher than Milton's.
^ Hopefully the people affected will get the help they need now and in the future. ^
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