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Surviving a Disaster: The Hurricane Katrina Effect

Published on Apr 18, 2017

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Surviving a Disaster: The Hurricane Katrina Effect

Completed by 2nd Grade Scholars
Photo by fakelvis

History

  • August 29-30, 2005
  • Hurricane Katrina caused a disaster in New Orleans and parts of the gulf coast of the United States.
  • When the storm made landfall, it had a Category 3 rating on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale–it brought sustained winds of 100–140 miles per hour–and stretched some 400 miles across.
Photo by fakelvis

Facts About Katrina

  • 500,000 homes destroyed
  • 500,000 jobs lost
  • 80% of New Orleans was under water
  • Over 100,000 homes were inundated
  • Food and harvest were all remotely destroyed as a reulst of the high wind speeds and flooding.
  • Water within the city was contimaniated.
Photo by fakelvis

Hurricane Katrina

Photo by FlickrHarris

STEM CHALLENGE...

  • Problem: The effects of a hurricane disaster on food production.
  • Solution: Implement new technologies such as hydroponics for crop production.

Benefits of Hydroponics

  • Fastest growing sector or agriculture.
  • Will potentially dominate food production in the future
  • Preserves valuable land mass.
  • 4 cycles of harvest can be performed annually instead of traditional single harvest.
Photo by FoxTravels

Hydroponics

Photo by FoxTravels

Steps for a Hydroponic Garden

  • Step 1: Gather all materials.
  • Step 2: Make a peroxide solution to germinate seeds.
  • Step 3: Use an instrument to loosen the soil from pot.
  • Step 4: Remove all dirt from roots and place in a cup of water.
  • Step 5: Hold punch pots and cut out place holders of your tubs.
  • Step 6: Place plant inside of mineral treated water tubs.
Photo by laurabillings

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