domingo, julho 10, 2005

um furacão chamado dennis

Cuba. Eugenio Valiente stands in what remains of his house after Hurricane Dennis smashed through Cuba. The hurricane whipped up yet more wind speed, becoming 'extremely dangerous' as it churned toward US coastal areas.(AFP/Adalberto Roque)



Cubans run laughing through a flooded street in Cienfuegos after Hurricane Dennis in Cuba, July 9, 2005. Authorities in the U.S. urged more than 1.2 million people to evacuate as a powerful and growing Hurricane Dennis closed in on low-lying coastal areas of northwestern Florida, Alabama and Mississippi on Saturday after killing at least 32 people in Cuba and Haiti. REUTERS/Henry Romero



Cubans play soccer underneath knocked-down power lines after Hurricane Dennis in Cienfuegos, July 9, 2005. Authorities in the U.S. urged more than 1.2 million people to evacuate as a powerful and growing Hurricane Dennis closed in on low-lying coastal areas of northwestern Florida, Alabama and Mississippi on Saturday after killing at least 32 people in Cuba and Haiti. REUTERS/Henry Romero


Florida, Key West resident Tim Kelly attaches a line to a fallen palm tree blocking the road in order to remove it after high winds and heavy rains generated by Hurricane Dennis slammed the island.(AFP/Getty Images/Win McNamee)





Florida. Os preparativos para a chegado do furacão, apesar de milhares de pessoas terem fugido das áreas que deverão ser mais afectadas. Home owners prepare for Hurricane Dennis, Saturday July 9, 2005, in Fort Walton Beach, Fla. Hurricane Dennis dealt a glancing blow to the Florida Keys on Saturday, knocking out power and leaving streets flooded with seaweed as it roared toward the storm-weary Gulf Coast, where nearly 1.4 million people were under evacuation orders. (AP Photo/Mari Darr~Welch)


Florida. Debris and tree limbs litter a road as winds from Hurricane Dennis roar through town Saturday July 9, 2005 in Key West, Fla. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)


Gusts anticipating Hurricane Dennis batter Havana's malecon on July 8. Cuba's deadliest hurricane in 40 years gathered strength as it moved over the Gulf of Mexico, after killing at least 10 people.(AFP/File/Adalberto Roque)


This image released by NASA collected at 5:55 am EDT Sunday July 10, 2005 showing swirling Hurricane Dennis in the eastern Gulf of Mexico. At 5 a.m. EDT, Dennis' eye was about 170 miles south of Panama City in the Panhandle and 245 miles southeast of Biloxi, Miss. It was moving north-northwest at about 15 mph with sustained winds of 145 mph and is expected to turn more to the north before landfall, forecasters said. Dennis' expected landfall on Sunday would be the earliest a Category 4 hurricane has hit the United States since Hurricane Audrey struck the Louisiana and Texas coasts in June 1957, according to the National Hurricane Center. (AP Photo/NASA)

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