Everything about Hurricane Frances totally explained
Hurricane Frances was the sixth named
storm, the fourth
hurricane, and the third major hurricane of the
2004 Atlantic hurricane season. The storm's maximum sustained wind speeds were 145
mph (230 km/h), giving it a strength of Category 4 on the
Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale. The
eye passed over
San Salvador Island and very close to
Cat Island in the
Bahamas, and its outer bands also affected
Puerto Rico and the
British Virgin Islands. Frances then passed over the central sections of the state of
Florida in the
U.S., moved briefly over the
Gulf of Mexico on the other side of Florida, and made a second U.S. landfall at the
Florida Panhandle. Frances affected the central regions of Florida just three weeks after
Hurricane Charley, before it moved northward into
Georgia as a
tropical depression, and northeast along the spine of the
Appalachians.
Storm history
A strong tropical wave developed into a tropical depression late on
August 25th,
2004 (
EDT). It was then 870 miles (1,400 km) west-southwest of
Cape Verde, and about 1,650 miles (2,700 km) east of the
Windward Islands. The next day it was upgraded and named
Tropical Storm Frances, the eighth
Atlantic storm of that name, bringing
Frances level with
Arlene for the most-used name of Atlantic
tropical cyclones. The storm was upgraded to a hurricane and named
Hurricane Frances on
August 26.
Frances strengthened rapidly, reaching Category 3 intensity 24 hours later on the 27th and Category 4 the next day. Initially forecast to turn north and potentially threaten Bermuda, conditions changed and Frances's predicted track shifted westward toward the Bahamas. Frances's intensity fluctuated as it travelled west over the next several days, dropping back to a Category 3 storm before restrengthening. This drop and subsequent restrengthening was likely caused by an
eyewall replacement cycle, according to the
National Hurricane Center (NHC).
Over the next several days, Frances passed just north of the Antilles, with only its outer rain bands affecting the
British Virgin Islands and the
Dominican Republic. On the evening of
September 1, Frances passed to the north of
Grand Turk in the
Turks and Caicos Islands. Although Frances didn't strike the island directly, hurricane force winds were reported there.
On
September 2, Frances struck the
Bahamas directly, passing directly over
San Salvador Island and very near to
Cat Island.The storm moved west northwest and weakened through the day,dropping down to a Category 3 by 2PM.This was initially attributed to inner core processes,but increasing westerly shear was later determined to be the cause.
On
September 3, Frances weakened slightly as it passed into the vicinity of
Abaco Island and directly over
Grand Bahama. The storm weakened from a Category 3 to 2 prior to passing over Grand Bahama and also lessened in forward speed. Parts of
South Florida began to be affected by
squalls and the outer rainbands of the hurricane at this time. Gusts from 40 mph (60 km/h) to as high as 87 mph (140 km/h) were reported from Jupiter Inlet to Miami.
Frances moved slowly, between 5 to 10 mph (8 to 16 km/h), as it crossed the warm
Gulf Stream between the Bahamas and Florida, leading to fears it could rapidly restrengthen. It remained stable at category 2 with 105 mph (170 km/h) maximum sustained winds, though, and battered the east coast of Florida, especially between
Fort Pierce and
West Palm Beach, for most of
September 4. At 11pm, the western edge of Frances's eyewall began moving onshore. Because of Frances's large eye of roughly 80 miles (130 km) across and slow motion, the center of circulation remained offshore for several more hours. At 1 am EDT on
September 5 (0500 UTC), the center of the broad eye of Frances finally was over Florida, on
Hutchinson Island, near
Sewall's Point,
Port Saint Lucie,
Stuart,
Jensen Beach and
Port Salerno, Florida.
Late on
September 5, it picked up speed and crossed the
Florida Peninsula, emerging over the
Gulf of Mexico near
Tampa as a tropical storm. After a short trip over water, Frances again struck land near
St. Marks, Florida. Frances headed inland, weakening to a tropical depression and causing heavy rainfall over the
southern and eastern United States. Tropical Depression Frances continued northeast.
United States meteorologists at the
Hydrometeorological Prediction Center continued issuing advisories on the remnants of Frances until the system crossed the
Canadian border into
Quebec, where heavy rainfall continued.
Preparations
The insurance industry warned of the potential for catastrophic damage along Florida's heavily-populated east coast. According to a
Reuters story, "Investment bank
UBS AG warned this latest storm could 'exceed the insured losses of Hurricane Andrew'".
Hurricane Andrew was the second most damaging United States hurricane, with insured losses tagged at $15.5 billion and total losses at $26.5 billion. However, these damage estimates were in anticipation that Frances would strike Florida as a strong Category Four hurricane.
Preparations for the storm were stepped up in Florida on
September 1. Governor
Jeb Bush declared a
state of emergency,
Kennedy Space Center closed down, and evacuations of 500,000 people were initially ordered. Eventually 41 counties received evacuation orders, covering 2.8 million residents, the largest evacuation in Florida's history.
The state education system also responded to the pending crisis. Many universities across Florida canceled classes. Both the
University of Central Florida and the
University of North Florida told all students to leave their dorms. Evacuation at the
University of South Florida was performed on a dorm-by-dorm basis.
Florida Atlantic University was closed for a week and a half.
Most schools were shut down from southern
Miami-Dade County to just south of
Melbourne two days before the hurricane.
Impact
The economic effect was felt early, as the storm struck during
Labor Day weekend, traditionally the final summer vacation weekend in the
United States. Many hotel reservations from
South Carolina to
Florida were cancelled as people, seeing the destruction caused weeks earlier by Hurricane Charley, decided to avoid the coastal areas for safety. One death in the Bahamas, one in
Ohio, and five in Florida were directly attributed to the storm. 42 more deaths - 32 in Florida, eight in
Georgia, one in the Bahamas and one in Ohio, are indirectly attributed to Frances.
Bahamas
In the Bahamas, insurers and reinsurers estimated industry insured losses at about $300 million. Like with other hurricane-induced damage, to get the total damage in the area, the insured damage is multiplied by a factor of 2, which comes out to $600 million.
Florida
Some areas of Florida received over of rain during the slow onslaught. Similar to
Hurricane Charley earlier in the month, the Florida
citrus crops took large amounts of damage. Frances caused heavy damage to the large
Vehicle Assembly Building at the
Kennedy Space Center, ripping off over a thousand 4-by-10 foot aluminum panels used to clad the building. While Charley caused $700,000 damage, Frances caused much more. Two external fuel tanks for the
space shuttle were in the building but seem undamaged. The
Space Shuttle Discovery's hangar was without power. The total damage to space and military facilities around
Cape Canaveral, Florida was reported at about $100 million.
Orlando, Florida's theme parks closed Sunday — only the third time
Walt Disney World closed for a hurricane, but the second time in a month. In the aftermath of the storm, many colleges and school districts remained closed. President
George W. Bush declared all of Florida a federal disaster area.
Elsewhere across the United States
Frances dropped significant rain on Florida, Georgia,
Alabama, and
North and
South Carolina. The passage of tropical depression Frances into Georgia dumped up to of rain onto the state and caused the closings of schools in 56 counties. Flooding was reported even in the mid-Atlantic and Northeast states, particularly along the
Appalachian Mountains. A strip of upslope-induced rainfall along the Blue Ridge escarpment produced as much as of rain in some areas of western North Carolina as the warm tropical air surged up and over the mountains. The flooding from this along the
Swannanoa River near
Asheville, North Carolina caused a major break in the Asheville's water distribution system, leaving the city without water for several days. Frances also spawned 101
tornadoes from
Florida to as far north as
Virginia, shy of the single storm tornado record set during
Hurricane Beulah.
Power outages affected up to six million people. Over 20 airports closed during the storm.
The total civilian damage from Frances was determined to be approximately US$8,830,000,000 (2004 dollars). Add in the estimated US$100 million damage (2004 dollars) done to space and military facilities at
Cape Canaveral, Florida and the total damage was estimated to be about US$9 billion (2004 dollars), making it the fourth costliest hurricane in United States history at that time, behind
Hurricane Andrew of 1992 and Hurricanes
Charley and
Ivan of 2004. At the time, adjusted for inflation, it became the seventh costliest hurricane for the lower 48
United States.
Canada
As an extratropical storm, Frances passed through southern
Ontario. The storm dropped up to 5.39 inches/137 mm rainfall, washing out roads and causing localized flooding in
Quebec,
New Brunswick, and
Newfoundland. This rainfall smashed all-time rainfall records in a 24-hour period (most of the rain fell in a 6 to 8 hour-period. Ottawa's
O-Train transit rail was halted because of a
landslide that obstructed the railroad corridor. Several major roads in
Gatineau and Ottawa were under several inches of water, locally chest-high. More than $45 million Canadian/US$35 million (2004 dollars) in insured damage was reported in
Ontario.
Retirement
Because of its effects in the
United States, the name Frances was retired in the spring of 2005 by the
World Meteorological Organization and won't be used again for an
Atlantic hurricane. It was replaced with Fiona for the
2010 season. Initially, the WMO planned to retire the name after the 2004 season anyway, following a request from
France during the WMO meeting in spring 2003, but the destruction caused by Frances was cause enough for retirement on its own merit.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Hurricane Frances'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://hurricane_frances.totallyexplained.com">Hurricane Frances Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |