What is a storm growth?

The increase in the storm is a high flood of water caused by wind and low pressure, most often associated with hurricanes. It is the deadliest aspect of a hurricane, responsible for 90% of deaths during the hurricanes. The growth of storms differs from tidal increases, which are violent increases caused exclusively by a tidal shift in the sea level. This wind quickly pushes water and puts it in a huge wave. At the same time, the low pressure caused by a hurricane also causes the water level to rise in the lowest places and sink in higher pressure areas, impairing the accumulation of the wool caused by winds. In addition, the shape of the ocean bottom can affect how high the waves of the increase are when they reach the soil. The largest recorded was Australia in 1899, which reached a height of 43 feet (13 m). In the United States in 2005, the storm was connected with the hurricane Katrina 30 feet (9m).

in the United States and many other countries are not a storm growth in the primary causeltins associated with hurricanes. In fact, in the last twenty years, over 1% of deaths related to hurricane in the United States have been caused. Most hurricane deaths in the United States come from inland floods. In other parts of the world, however, virtually all deaths related to hurricane are the result of storms. Bangladesh is the world's most affected by storms, with more than a hundred record -breaking. These are responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths only in the Bangladesh region.

In areas such as the region of the United States coast, concerns about the problem of public storm are increasing. Given that the United States has not been dramatically affected by overvoltage since the age of 20. With the growing frequency of hurricanes in this area of ​​the world, there is pressure to learn awareness and readiness before events, such as the overvoltage of a storm in the 1900 Galveston, which killed more than ten thousand people, is repeated.

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