Satellite shows flooding from Myanmar hurricane
The death toll continues to climb in Myanmar in the wake of a major hurricane. Cyclone Nargis hit over the weekend with 130 mph winds. As of late Tuesday, the death toll had climbed to 22,000, with twice as many people believed to be missing.
High resolution satellite imagery shows how much of the low-lying area was affected by the storm. In the top picture, taken April 15, you can clearly see the ocean and rivers in blue, as well as the fields and wetlands in green and brown.
SPACE
The next image was taken on Monday. The blue shading shows floodwater covering about 20,000 square miles of Myanmar. Yangon, a city similar in population to Houston, is almost completely surrounded by water.
Nargis was the equivalent of a strong category 3 hurricane and moved in from the west. The storm was near peak intensity when it made landfall on May 2. The strong winds and a broad counter-clockwise circulation pushed a huge swell of ocean water into the Gulf of Martabon. As the eye made landfall south of Bassein, the 12-foot storm surge inundated the area which is barely above sea level. Most of the victims drowned.



















nice article very informatIve!!!
Posted by: jim | May 08, 2008 at 10:10 AM