Hurricane Project?! Help:)?
I need help!
Im doing a Hurricane Project for TX History and I really dont know what to do.
So Far all I have is this:
The time of year is here. Hurricane Season. Except, this may be the strongest hurricane Galveston has ever experienced. Hurricane Celenia is on its way! Officials say that Hurricane Celenia is a category 5 at the moment, but may change to a category 4 when it hits dry land. Winds will be up to 154 MPH. The Hurricane was located at 86 latitude and 23 longitude October 2, 2009, and is planning to hit Galveston October 12, 2009 at 2:42 am
The things below is all you have to have in the report.
Newpaper Name
Title of your article
Authors name
Date and time
Hurricanes name and category
Where it started
where it is believed to hit
what residents should do to prepare for the storm
and were suppose to use hurricane vocabualry.
Heres the hurricane Vocabulary.
Eye
Hurricane Warning
Storm surge
millibar
knot
storm tide
sea wall
typhoon
cyclone
hurricane
tropical depression
eye wall
Hurricane watch
saffir-Simpson scale
hurricane Season
I need help.
Come someone help me?
Tagged with: article authors • authors name • category 5 • celenia • cyclone • eye wall • hurricane galveston • hurricane project • hurricane season • hurricane warning • hurricane watch • hurricanes • sea wall • simpson scale • storm surge • storm tide • strongest hurricane • time of year • tropical depression • vocabualry
Filed under: Tropical Storms
Like this post? Subscribe to my RSS feed and get loads more!
You will need to do your own brain-storming to figure it all out.
Much of what you need to have in the report is already in the description. For the newspaper name and article title, you should make up a name. For the author’s name, use your own name because its you who is actually making the article.
Now as for hurricane preparations and terminology, here are a few website that will give you the information you need:
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/HAW2/english/intro.shtml
http://www.weather.gov/glossary/
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/aboutgloss.shtml