Well they're going to have to DRAG people out of there. I know there are so people who refuse to leave. I just had a thought. All those cemetaries getting flooded with water will create a contaminated situation.
Not just the cemetaries. Sewage, chemicals, gas...It'll me a poisonous mixture. Water, water everywhere and not a drop to drink.
Well they're going to have to DRAG people out of there. I know there are so people who refuse to leave.
You are right! They all say the same thing, "It will turn"....
You make a great point, the danger doesn't lie strictly with the wind & the rain...The flooding is the biggest danger! Contaminates in the water, bugs, snakes,etc....... I say the biggest because as the storm passes the rain & wind goes away. The flooding stays for days !
I would think it would be minor compared with all the fresh animal and human corpses, at least the ones the gators don't clean up.
NEW ORLEANS IS SINKING BY JIM WILSONPublished on: September 11, 2001
The surge of a Category 5 storm could put New Orleans under 18 ft. of water.
They don't bury the dead in New Orleans. The highest point in the city is only 6 ft. above sea level, which makes for watery graves. Fearful that rotting corpses caused epidemics, the city limited ground burials in 1830. Mausoleums built on soggy cemetery grounds became the final resting place for generations.
Beyond providing a macabre tourist attraction, these "cities of the dead" serve as a reminder of the Big Easy's vulnerability to flooding. The reason water rushes into graves is because New Orleans sits atop a delta made of unconsolidated material that has washed down the Mississippi River. Think of the city as a chin jutting out, waiting for a one-two punch from Mother Nature.
The first blow comes from the sky. Hurricanes plying the Gulf of Mexico push massive domes of water (storm surges) ahead of their swirling winds.
After the surges hit, the second blow strikes from below. The same swampy delta ground that necessitates above-ground burials leaves water from the storm surge with no place to go but up.
The fact that New Orleans has not already sunk is a matter of luck. If slightly different paths had been followed by Hurricanes Camille, which struck in August 1969, Andrew in August 1992 or George in September 1998, today we might need scuba gear to tour the French Quarter.
This is catastrophic..