After days of terrifying predictions, Irma arrived slammed into the Florida Keys on Sunday morning and the Florida mainland Sunday afternoon. It entered the state as a Category 4 hurricane and left as a still-powerful tropical storm.
Irma had weakened Monday but continued to have remarkable reach, with high winds reaching more than 400 miles from the center.
While the northern part of the state is still experiencing the wind, rain and storm surge, the southern part has begun to assess the storm’s damage.

Irma wind field history as of 5 p.m.
on Monday, Sept. 11.
Hurricane-strength winds
Tropical storm
NC
TN
Charlotte
SC
Charleston
AL
GA
Savannah
Atlantic Ocean
Irma was downgraded to a tropical storm Monday.
FL
100 MILES
Tampa
Marco Island
Miami
Landfall at
3:35 p.m. Sunday
Cudjoe Key
Landfall at
9:10 a.m. Sunday
Gulf of Mexico

Irma wind field history as of 5 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 11.
Hurricane-strength winds
Tropical storm
TENNESSEE
NORTH
CAROLINA
Charlotte
Greenville
Columbia
Atlanta
SOUTH
CAROLINA
Macon
Charleston
Montgomery
Savannah
ALABAMA
GEORGIA
Brunswick
Atlantic
Ocean
Pensacola
Jacksonville
Tallahassee
Gainesville
Irma was downgraded to a topical storm Monday.
FLORIDA
100 MILES
Orlando
Tampa
Gulf of
Mexico
West Palm Beach
Fort Lauderdale
Marco Island
Landfall at 3:35 p.m. Sunday
Miami
Key West
Cudjoe Key
Landfall at 9:10 a.m. Sunday

Irma wind field history as of 5 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 11.
Hurricane-strength winds
Tropical storm
Knoxville
TENNESSEE
NORTH
CAROLINA
Charlotte
Greenville
Columbia
Atlanta
SOUTH
CAROLINA
Macon
Charleston
Montgomery
Savannah
ALABAMA
GEORGIA
Brunswick
Atlantic
Ocean
Pensacola
Jacksonville
Tallahassee
Gainesville
Palm Coast
Irma was downgraded to a tropical storm Monday.
FLORIDA
100 MILES
Orlando
Tampa
Gulf of
Mexico
Sarasota
West Palm Beach
Fort Lauderdale
Marco Island
Miami
Landfall at 3:35 p.m. Sunday
Key West
Cudjoe Key
Landfall at 9:10 a.m. Sunday

Share of households in each
wind field
Approx. 6 million people in 2.3 million
households
31.4%
67.1
100
100
79.4
60.5
40.7

Share of households in each wind field
Approx. 6 million people in 2.3 million households
31.4%
67.1
100
100
79.4
60.5
40.7

Share of households in each wind field
Approx. 6 million people in 2.3 million households
31.4%
67.1
100
100
79.4
60.5
40.7
Irma brought substantial winds across Florida and into Georgia and parts of Alabama and South Carolina, with some areas reporting gusts at nearly 90 miles per hour.
The National Weather Service uses an array of instruments, also known as the Automated Surface Observing System, to measure climate conditions, especially during a hurricane.

Hourly sustained wind speeds as Irma made landfall
Wind speed
Gust speed
Irma landfall
Gust max speed
Key West
75
75 mph
50
25
No data available
0
12 a.m.
Friday
12 a.m.
Sunday
12 a.m.
Tuesday
Miami
75 mph
71
50
25
0
12 a.m.
Friday
12 a.m.
Sunday
12 a.m.
Tuesday
Ft. Lauderdale
75 mph
50
45
25
0
12 a.m.
Friday
12 a.m.
Sunday
12 a.m.
Tuesday
Naples
76
75 mph
50
25
0
12 a.m.
Friday
12 a.m.
Sunday
12 a.m.
Tuesday
Ft. Myers
89
75 mph
50
25
0
12 a.m.
Friday
12 a.m.
Sunday
12 a.m.
Tuesday
Tampa
75 mph
63
50
25
0
12 a.m.
Friday
12 a.m.
Sunday
12 a.m.
Tuesday
Orlando
75 mph
70
50
25
0
12 a.m.
Friday
12 a.m.
Sunday
12 a.m.
Tuesday
Jacksonville
75 mph
71
50
25
0
12 a.m.
Friday
12 a.m.
Sunday
12 a.m.
Tuesday
Tallahassee
75 mph
51
50
25
0
12 a.m.
Friday
12 a.m.
Sunday
12 a.m.
Tuesday
Savannah
75 mph
60
50
25
0
12 a.m.
Friday
12 a.m.
Sunday
12 a.m.
Tuesday
Montgomery
75 mph
50
28
25
0
12 a.m.
Friday
12 a.m.
Sunday
12 a.m.
Tuesday
Atlanta
75 mph
59
50
25
0
12 a.m.
Friday
12 a.m.
Sunday
12 a.m.
Tuesday
Note: Gust speeds are recorded when the difference between peak and lull wind speeds is at least 10 mph.

Hourly sustained wind speeds as Irma made landfall
Wind speed
Gust speed
Irma landfall
Gust max speed
Ft. Myers
89
Key West
Miami
Ft. Lauderdale
Naples
Tampa
75
76
71
75 mph
63
50
45
25
No data available
0
12 a.m.
Friday
12 a.m.
Tuesday
South
North
Orlando
Jacksonville
Tallahassee
Savannah
Montgomery
Atlanta
71
70
75 mph
59
60
51
50
28
25
0
12 a.m.
Friday
12 a.m.
Tuesday
Note: Gust speeds are recorded when the difference between peak and lull wind speeds is at least 10 mph.

Hourly sustained wind speeds as Irma made landfall
Wind speed
Gust speed
Irma landfall
Gust max speed
89
Key West
Miami
Ft. Lauderdale
Naples
Ft. Myers
Tampa
75
76
75 mph
71
63
50
45
25
No data available
0
12 a.m.
Friday
12 a.m.
Sunday
12 a.m.
Tuesday
South
North
Orlando
Jacksonville
Tallahassee
Savannah
Montgomery
Atlanta
70
71
75 mph
59
60
51
50
28
25
0
12 a.m.
Friday
12 a.m.
Sunday
12 a.m.
Tuesday
Note: Gust speeds are recorded when the difference between peak and lull wind speeds is at least 10 mph.
But with enough force, those instruments can fail.
In Key West, the city’s monitoring system at the Key West International Airport reported an outage shortly before Irma made landfall at about 9 a.m. Sunday, said Susan Buchanan, director of public affairs for the National Weather Service, in an email.
The airport’s last wind reading before failing: 75 mph gusts.
Buchanan said the weather service also received word about a system outage at Ft. Lauderdale International Airport, which recorded 45 mph gusts before it failed.
As Irma moved north, so did power outages. By Monday morning, more than 6 million households in Florida had lost power. As restoration began in some place, others, such as areas of Georgia, went dark.
Storm surge and its impact

Sept. 10, 2017 | A car sits abandoned in storm surge along North Fort Lauderdale Beach Boulevard in Fort Lauderdale. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Sept. 9, 2017 | Water rises up to a sidewalk by the Miami river as Hurricane Irma arrives at south Florida, in downtown Miami. (Carlos Barria/Reuters)
As Irma approached, the low pressure of the storm system and force of the winds pulled water away from shorelines.
Next came a large storm surge that pushed even more water back in, causing tides to rise several feet above normal as the storm made landfall.

Water levels above predicted tide
The disappearing waters were a surprising sight to many. In some locations residents ventured out on shoreline that is normally covered by 4 to 5 feet of water. In Manatee County the receding waters stranded two manatees.
The National Hurricane Center posted a storm surge warning from Florida up to South Carolina, estimating that water levels rise more than 15 feet in some areas.
Tornado watches and warnings also blanketed Florida as Irma’s wind bands spawned other storms.

Potential storm surge flooding (feet above ground)
More than 9
1 to 3
3 to 6
6 to 9
Intertidal and wetland areas, areas that
routinely flood during typical high tides
Orlando
Atlantic
Ocean
Tampa
St. Petersburg
Sarasota
Port Charlotte
Fort Myers
Naples
Big Cypress
Nat’l
Preserve
Miami
Marco
Island
Everglades
Nat’l Park
Gulf of
Mexico
Key West
Cudjoe Key
10 MILES
Naples
75
Gulf of
Mexico
10 MILES
Fort
Myers
Cape
Coral
75
Port
Charlotte
75
Charlotte
Harbor
10 MILES
Tampa
St. Petersburg
75
Tampa
Bay
10 MILES

Orlando
Atlantic
Ocean
Tampa
St. Petersburg
Sarasota
Port Charlotte
Fort Myers
Cape Coral
Gulf of Mexico
Fort
Lauderdale
Naples
Big Cypress
Nat’l
Preserve
Miami
Marco
Island
Potential storm surge flooding
(feet above ground)
1 to 3
Everglades
Nat’l Park
3 to 6
6 to 9
More than 9
Intertidal and
wetland areas,
areas that routinely
flood during high tides
Key West
Cudjoe Key
50 MILES
10 MILES
10 MILES
Fort
Myers
Cape
Coral
Naples
75
75
Gulf of
Mexico
Tampa
Port
Charlotte
75
St. Petersburg
Charlotte
Harbor
75
Tampa
Bay
10 MILES
10 MILES

Orlando
Tampa
Atlantic
Ocean
St. Petersburg
Sarasota
Port Charlotte
Fort Myers
Cape Coral
Gulf of Mexico
Fort Lauderdale
Naples
Big Cypress
Nat’l
Preserve
Marco
Island
Miami
Potential storm surge flooding
(feet above ground)
1 to 3
Everglades
Nat’l Park
3 to 6
6 to 9
More than 9
Intertidal and wetland areas,
areas that routinely flood
during typical high tides
50 MILES
Key West
Cudjoe Key
10 MILES
10 MILES
Tampa
Port
Charlotte
Fort
Myers
Cape
Coral
Naples
75
75
75
St. Petersburg
Charlotte
Harbor
75
Tampa
Bay
Gulf of
Mexico
10 MILES
10 MILES
The surge was particularly threatening to vulnerable, low-lying cities such as Tampa, and the area seemed ill-prepared for it. A World Bank study called Tampa Bay one of the 10 areas in the world most at risk of damaging and costly flooding.
Evacuations ordered
As the storm approached, more than 6 million people in Florida were ordered to evacuate.
In Miami-Dade County, authorities issued the county’s first major, mandatory evacuation in more than a decade. Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal also issued mandatory evacuations in the state’s coastal counties, including the areas east of Interstate 95.

Approximate mandatory evacuation zones as of 3:30 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 10. Evacuation routes are shown in white.
Savannah
GEORGIA
341
341
75
Atlantic
Ocean
10
Tallahassee
10
95
FLORIDA
Gulf of
Mexico
75
Orlando
Tampa
95
100 MILES
27
Fort Myers
Miami
41
1
Key West

Approximate mandatory evacuation zones
as of 3:30 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 10.
Evacuation routes are shown in white.
GEORGIA
Savannah
341
341
Atlantic
Ocean
75
10
Tallahassee
Pensacola
Jacksonville
10
Gainesville
95
Palm Coast
75
4
Orlando
75
Gulf of Mexico
4
Tampa
St. Petersburg
95
FLORIDA
Lake
Okeechobee
Fort Myers
27
75
Miami
41
100 MILES
1
Key West

Approximate mandatory evacuation zones as of 3:30 p.m.
on Sunday, Sept. 10. Evacuation routes are shown in white.
Atlantic
Ocean
Savannah
GEORGIA
341
75
10
Tallahassee
Pensacola
Jacksonville
10
95
Gainesville
Palm Coast
75
FLORIDA
Gulf of Mexico
4
Orlando
75
100 MILES
4
Tampa
Counties on Florida’s west coast ordered mandatory evacuations as Irma’s eye is poised go up the coast.
St. Petersburg
95
27
Lake
Okeechobee
West Palm
Beach
Fort Myers
27
75
Miami
41
Monroe County, which includes the Florida Keys, issued a mandatory evacuation for all visitors and residents. There will be no shelters open in the county.
1
Key West
Additional low-lying areas and those in mobile homes may also be or have been under mandatory evacuation orders. As of Sunday, more than 114,000 people filled more than 500 shelters in Florida.

Bonnie Berkowitz, John Muyskens, Tim Meko, Armand Emamdjomeh, Denise Lu, Aaron Steckelberg, Chiqui Esteban, Gabriel Florit, Ted Mellnik and Chris Alcantara contributed to this report.
About this story
Hurricane path forecast, coastal warning/watches, satellite imagery, tide gauge and wind data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Population data from the U.S. Census. Evacuation zones from the Florida Division of Emergency Management. Evacuation information from county and state websites. Impervious surfaces dataset from the U.S. Geological Service.
Originally published Sept. 10, 2017.
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