Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesLuis Frankie, age 66, waits to board an evacuation cruise ship in San Juan.
Ricardo Arduengo / AFP/Getty ImagesA man walks on a highway divider while carrying his bicycle in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesHighway 10, a major north-south connection through Puerto Rico, was washed out by Hurricane Maria.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesHeydee Perez, age 29, and her son, Yeriel Calera, age 4, have not received any aid one week after Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Ricl. The roof of their home is gone and they have very little to eat.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesOfficial cars with loudspeakers roll slowly down a street in Old San Juan, Puerto Rico, broadcasting a warning to residents to evacuate as Hurricane Maria approaches.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesWide swaths of Puerto Rico remained without power.
Ricardo Arduengo / AFP / Getty ImagesWinds lash the coastal city of Fajardo as Hurricane Maria approaches Puerto Rico.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesTwo people sit in an apartment with a wall missing along the waterfront in San Juan. Nearly one week after hurricane Maria devastated the island of Puerto Rico, residents are still trying to get the basics of food, water, gas, and money from banks.
Joe Raedle / Getty ImagesVehicles drive along a flooded road after Hurricane Maria passed through the area in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesResidents of Isla Palmeras, a San Juan neighborhood, are surrounded by floodwater.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesMaria downed trees and damaged structures in Old San Juan.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesOld San Juan has no electricity, including the area of La Perla. Restoring power to the island may take months.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesBranches are strewn about Santurce, part of San Juan.
Lionel Chamoiseau / AFP/Getty ImagesRocks swept up by hurricane-generated waves cover a road along the oceanfront in Le Carbet, on the French Caribbean island of Martinique.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesBlance Dias, age 77, opens a container of cold ravioli that she received at a FEMA food distribution. "I'm hungry. I haven't eaten in two days," she said.
Lionel Chamoiseau / AFP/Getty ImagesA restaurant lies in splinters in Le Carbet, on the French Caribbean island of Martinique, after it was hit by Hurricane Maria.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesAs Hurricane Maria approached from the other direction, Old San Juan was graced by a dramatic sunset on Monday.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesEvacuees rest in almost complete darkness on the ground floor of the Roberto Clemente Coliseum, a major shelter in San Juan.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesNeighbors come together to move a car in San Juan's La Perla area.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesA historic cemetery at the water's edge in Old San Juan, Puerto Rico, faces possible flooding as Hurricane Maria passes over the island.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesDavid Leininger leaves his flooded car in a San Juan parking lot.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesHospital employees and nurses gather to pray for a co-worker who was critically injured in a violent attack during the chaos after Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico.
Dominique Chomereau-Lamotte / Associated PressPeople walk by a fallen tree off the shore of Sainte-Anne on the French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe after the passing of Hurricane Maria.
Lionel Chamoiseau / AFP/Getty ImagesPeople walk amid debris of a restaurant shattered by Hurricane Maria in Le Carbet on the French Caribbean island of Martinique.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesResidents of the San Juan district of Santurce wade through floodwater toward their home.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesLyan Carrillo, 12, foreground, and her family, including Nilda Ramirez, center, and Ramirez's 1-year-old son, Crisxander Cotto, returned to their home in La Perla. They plan to stay despite the lack of electricity and water.
Hector Retamal / AFP/Getty ImagesTrees topple in a parking lot at Roberto Clemente Coliseum in San Juan.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesIn Utuado, Puerto Rico, rushing water from Hurricane Maria tore down trees and stripped them of their branches. The main north-south road is washed out, leaving people cut off.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesIn the mountain town of Utuado, Puerto Rico, residents are struggling to recover after Hurricane Maria. There is no running water, so people are collecting water from mountain springs.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesSonia Viruet, who lives in La Perla, takes stock after Hurricane Maria caused widespread damage.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesCesar Ayala, second from left, and his family wait to board an evacuation cruise ship in San Juan.
Lionel Chamoiseau / AFP/Getty ImagesA man clears debris from a street in Saint-Pierre, on the French Caribbean island of Martinique, after it was hit by Hurricane Maria.
Dominique Chomereau-Lamotte / Assocaited PressA boat lays on its side off the shore of Sainte-Anne on the French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe after the passing of Hurricane Maria.
Ricardo Arduengo / AFP/Getty ImagesDamaged sailboats washed ashore are seen in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria in Fajardo, Puerto Rico.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesThe long cleanup process has begun in La Perla, part of Old San Juan.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesA line of people hoping to withdraw money wraps around the Banco Popular in San Juan on Monday.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesOld San Juan resident Rosa Avalo, 48, saw her home, purple building, damaged by debris from her neighbor's property.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesAt the Sheraton Old San Juan, people wait out the hurricane.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesPolice control the lines at every gas station in the San Juan metro area.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesResidents of La Perla begin to clean up.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesChildren bath with the water from a fire hydrant in a public housing project in San Juan. Residents are still trying to get the basics of food, water, gas, and money from banks.
Ricardo Arduengo / AFP / Getty ImagesA man wades through a flooded road in Fajardo on Wednesday.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesDelia Pineda, 89, is evacuated from Salto Arriba, an area cut off from Utuado following Hurricane Maria.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesA Royal Caribbean cruise ship is evacuating over 2,000 people from Puerto Rico, St. John, and St. Thomas.
Helene Valenzuela / AFP/Getty ImagesDebris in a street in Marigot, on the French Caribbean island of Saint Martin, after Hurricane Maria hit.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesWorkers at the Inaru restaurant in Old San Juan take in umbrellas and close early in anticipation of Hurricane Maria.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesA view from the Sheraton Old San Juan, where people were waiting out Maria.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesA damaged residence in Old San Juan's La Perla community. Like the rest of Puerto Rico, the residents are without power or running water.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesIvan Lopez, 51, helps a neighbor with his badly damaged home. "I was born here, I'll die here," Lopez said.
Lionel Chamoiseau / AFP/Getty ImagesPeople clear debris in Saint-Pierre, on the French Caribbean island of Martinique, after it was hit by Hurricane Maria.
Hector Retamal / AFP/Getty ImagesPeople are transported along a road flooded by Hurricane Maria in Juana Matos, Puerto Rico.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesThe day after Hurricane Maria's direct hit, residents of La Perla, part of Old San Juan, begin cleaning up.
Douglas Curran / AFP/Getty ImagesDowned traffic lights and power lines are seen in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria in Luquillo, Puerto Rico.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesOld San Juan is without electricity after Maria.
Hector Retamal / AFP/Getty ImagesA man and his daughter flee from the rain on a San Juan beach before Hurricane Maria's arrival.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesIn downtown San Juan, electric lines lie in the road and poles block apartment complexes.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesDarkness falls on downtown San Juan which remains without power. Puerto Rico officials say it will likely be four to six months before power is fully restored across the U.S. territory of 3.5 million people.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesRoberto Flores, left, helps move tree limbs from a San Juan road.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesIn Cruz Bay on St. John in the Virgin Islands, which already took a severe lashing from Hurricane Irma, workers rush to fix a roof in advance of Hurricane Maria.
Joe Raedle / Getty ImagesU.S. Coast Guard personnel survey the damage to an oil dock after Hurricane Maria passed through the area in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Hector Retamal / AFP/Getty ImagesPeople walk across a flooded street in Juana Matos, Puerto Rico.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesIvan Lopez looks at the damage to his neighbors' homes. His home was not as badly damaged, so he plans to stay despite a lack of water and electricity.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesHurricane Maria flattened vegetation across the island of Puerto Rico.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesPeople loot a furniture store in a section of Old San Juan after Maria damaged buildings.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesChickens run loose in the area of La Perla, where many homes were destroyed.
Alex Wroblewski / Getty ImagesResidents clear the streets after Hurricane Maria made landfall in the Guaynabo suburb of San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles TimesHurricane Maria devastated the island of Puerto Rico causing heavy damage to many homes.
The 2017 Atlantic has not only been super active so far, but also super unlucky. Whereas in some past busy hurricane seasons, land areas have avoided some of the most extreme storms – this year they have been a magnet.
Category 5 hurricanes have directly hit six land masses head on, leaving devastation in their wake almost every time. While just two separate hurricanes, Irma and Maria, did all the dirty work, they repeatedly found areas to target.
Brenden Moses, a researcher at the National Hurricane Center, found that of all Category 5 landfalls on record in the Atlantic since 1851, one-quarter have occurred this season. This is a remarkable statistic.
However, it’s important to remember monitoring of hurricanes was much more difficult prior to the advent of weather satellites in the late 1960s when storms may have been missed. That said, there is no precedent in the last half century of Category 5s striking land so frequently in the same season.
Category 5 hurricanes are the most destructive storms on Earth, bearing peak winds of at least 157 mph. The National Hurricane Center offers this description of the destruction they leave behind, which is consistent with what we’ve witnessed with this year’s storms:
“A high percentage of framed homes will be destroyed, with total roof failure and wall collapse. Fallen trees and power poles will isolate residential areas. Power outages will last for weeks to possibly months. Most of the area will be uninhabitable for weeks or months.”






































































