Hurricane Patricia and the other strongest hurricanes in history
Friday, October 23, 2015
Young boys use an umbrella to resist the wind while walking at a street of Kingston during the pass of Hurricane Dean over Jamaica, Sunday, Aug. 19, 2007.
AP Photo/Andres Leighton
Hurricane Patricia made landfall Friday evening on Mexico's southwestern Pacific Coast as residents and tourists braced for what forecasters called "potentially catastrophic" damage.
The Category 5 storm is the strongest ever in the Western Hemisphere, with maximum sustained winds of 190 mph (305 kph), according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami.
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This satellite image taken at 9:30 a.m. EDT on Friday, Oct. 23, 2015, and released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration shows Hurricane Patricia.
NOAA/RAMMB/CIRA via AP
Here's a look at some of the other strongest hurricanes in history:
Linda
September 1997
A woman sits up against the new sand berm off 62nd Place on Peninsula Beach in Long Beach. The sand berm was built in anticipation of Hurricane Linda and the El Nino winter.
Wilma, the most intense storm to date before Patricia, reached 882 hecto Pascals (hPa) and 185 miles per hour (mph).
AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana
Minimum pressure: 882 millibars
Peak wind intensity: 145 mph
Wilma was directly responsible for 22 deaths across Haiti, Florida, Jamaica and Mexico and caused $16.8 billion damage in Florida alone.
Gilbert
September 1988
Workmen chop trees felled by Hurricane Gilbert as it passed the Yucatan peninsula in Cancun, Mexico, Sept. 16, 1988
AP Photo/John Hopper
Minimum pressure: 888 millibars
Peak wind intensity: 185 mph
Gilbert made landfall in Cancun, Mexico, killing 318 people.
Labor Day
September 1935
This September 1935 file photo shows the wreckage of an 11-car passenger train that was derailed by a Labor Day hurricane in the Florida Keys.
AP Photo, File
Minimum pressure: 26.35 inches
Peak wind intensity: N/A
Hurricane Labor Day, as it was known, tore through the Florida Keys and killed 408 people.
Rita
September 2005
Sailboats washed ashore by category 3 Hurricane Rita surge and winds in Key West, Fla. in Sept. 2005.
Mike Theiss/National Geographic/Getty Images
Minimum pressure: 895 millibars (approx.)
Peak wind intensity: 180 mph
Rita cut through the Florida Keys before making landfall in southeastern Texas. It killed seven people and caused $10 billion in damage.
Allen
August 1980
A boat is left high and dry on the Texas state highway 100 after high tides receded in the wake of Hurricane Allen in Los Fresnos, Texas, Aug. 10, 1980.
AP Photo
Minimum pressure: 899 millibars
Peak wind intensity: 190 mph
Allen made landfall as a Category 3 storm, but killed over 260 people in the U.S., Caribbean and Mexico.
Katrina
August 2005
Floodwaters from Hurricane Katrina flow over a levee along Inner Harbor Navigaional Canal near downtown New Orleans Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2005.
AP Photo/David J. Phillip
Minimum pressure: 902 millibars
Peak wind intensity: 175 mph
Katrina killed approximately 1,200 people making it the deadliest hurricane to strike the U.S. since the Palm Beach-Lake Okeechobee hurricane of 1928. It is also the costliest U. S. hurricane on record.
Camille
August 1969
Refugees of hurricane Camille have no place to go as they are stranded by high water atop a structure at Venice, La., on August 20, 1969.
AP Photo/Jack Thornell
Minimum pressure: 26.84 inches
Peak wind intensity: 120 mph
Camille hit near Biloxi, Mississippi, killing 256 people in the U.S. and causing $1.421 billion in damage.
Mitch
October 1998
A house is flooded by hurricane Mitch on the coast of La Ceiba, Honduras, Oct. 28, 1998.
AP Photo/ Victor R. Caivano
Minimum pressure: 905 millibars
Peak wind intensity: 178 mph
Mitch caused an estimated 9,000 deaths in Central America and two in the United States.
Dean
August 2007
Young boys use an umbrella to resist the wind while walking at a street of Kingston during the pass of Hurricane Dean over Jamaica, Sunday, Aug. 19, 2007.
AP Photo/Andres Leighton
Minimum pressure: 905 millibars
Peak wind intensity: 155 mph
Dean was the first hurricane in the Atlantic basin to make landfall as a Category 5 storm since Hurricane Andrew in 1992 and was responsible for at least 45 deaths.