Hurricane Harvey

Hurricane Harvey was a devastating Category 4 hurricane that made landfall on Texas and Louisiana in August 2017, causing catastrophic flooding and more than 100 deaths. It is tied with 2005's Hurricane Katrina as the costliest tropical cyclone on record, inflicting $125 billion in damage, primarily from catastrophic rainfall-triggered flooding in the Houston metropolitan area and Southeast Texas; this made the storm the costliest natural disaster recorded in Texas at the time. It was the first major hurricane to make landfall in the United States since Wilma in 2005, ending a record 12-year span in which no hurricanes made landfall at the intensity of a major hurricane throughout the country. In a four-day period, many areas received more than 40 inches of rain as the system slowly meandered over eastern Texas and adjacent waters, causing unprecedented flooding.

Read more in the app

3D Views of Hurricane Harvey from the ISS – August 25, 2017

Climate change exacerbated hurricane Harvey's flood damage, hitting low-income and Latinx neighborhoods disproportionately harder

Houston residents' chemical exposure increased post-Hurricane Harvey, study finds

Study of Hurricane Harvey flooding aids in quantifying climate change

Pollutant levels after Hurricane Harvey exceeded lifetime cancer risk in some areas

Pollutant levels after Hurricane Harvey exceeded lifetime cancer risk in some areas

Air pollution from chemical plants made Hurricane Harvey worse