Hurricane Rita
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Hurricane Rita
Summary
Hurricane Rita is a Category 5 hurricane[1]. It draws 974 Wikipedia views per month (category_5_hurricane category, ranking #17 of 49).[2]
Key Facts
- Hurricane Rita's instance of is recorded as Category 5 hurricane[3].
- Hurricane Rita's part of the series is recorded as North Atlantic tropical cyclone[4].
- Hurricane Rita is part of 2005 Atlantic hurricane season[5].
- Hurricane Rita's Commons category is recorded as Hurricane Rita[6].
- Hurricane Rita began on September 18, 2005[7].
- Hurricane Rita ended on September 26, 2005[8].
- Hurricane Rita's located in/on physical feature is recorded as Atlantic Ocean[9].
- Hurricane Rita's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Hurricane Rita[10].
- Hurricane Rita resulted in {'amount': '+120'} deaths[11].
- Hurricane Rita's different from is recorded as Hurricane Rina[12].
- Hurricane Rita's lowest atmospheric pressure is recorded as {'unit': 'Q3495543', 'amount': '+897'}[13].
- Hurricane Rita's cost of damage is recorded as {'unit': 'Q4917', 'amount': '+12000000000'}[14].
- Hurricane Rita's maximum sustained winds is recorded as {'unit': 'Q128822', 'amount': '+155'}[15].
Body
When and Where
Hurricane Rita began on September 18, 2005[7]. It ended on September 26, 2005[8].
Context
Hurricane Rita is part of 2005 Atlantic hurricane season[5]. Its instance of is recorded as Category 5 hurricane[3].
Outcome and Impact
Hurricane Rita resulted in {'amount': '+120'} deaths[11].
Why It Matters
Hurricane Rita draws 974 Wikipedia views per month (category_5_hurricane category, ranking #17 of 49).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 20 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[16] It is known by 9 alternative names across languages and contexts.[17]