Caol Ila
Well-Known Member
Talking of risks, as in weather/hurricane risks, apparently the Carolinas have never been hit by a hurricane like this before. I just put it down to 'sods law'!
Also got me thinking, Tokyo is in an earthquake prone area. Does that not affect decisions? or any earthquake prone competition areas before? Just musing...
Not true. NC has been hit by 413 hurricanes and tropical cyclones since 1879, 120 of which were after 1980. Since 1980, they have caused $10 billion worth of damage to the state and resulted in 77 direct fatalities and 44 indirect ones. The biggest storms to hit the state in recent memory were Hurricane Fran in 1996, which was still a Category 3 storm when it made landfall in Wilmington, and Hugo in 1989, which devastated Charleston, while the biggest recorded one ever was Hurricane Hazel in 1954, a Cat 4 which struck near Calabash, NC, then moved north along the coast to states as far north as New York. It had winds of up to 100mph and caused $281 million worth of damage (in 1954 money). Florence, for the record, was a Cat 1 by the time it made landfall. Because it's slow-moving, it's causing a huge amount of rainfall and flooding in the state, but it's far from the most serious storm to ever hit NC.
So not only has NC had hurricanes like Florence. They're not uncommon, and it's had bigger ones.