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Gulf Coast of the United States

The Gulf Coast of the United States, also known as the Gulf South or the South Coast, is the coastline along the Southern United States where they meet the Gulf of Mexico. The coastal states that have a shoreline on the Gulf of Mexico are Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida, and these are known as the Gulf States.[2]

Gulf Coast
States that border the Gulf of Mexico are shown in red.
Country United States
States Alabama
 Florida
 Louisiana
 Mississippi
 Texas
Principal citiesHouston
Tampa
Mobile
New Orleans
Pensacola
Gulfport
Tallahassee
Largest cityHouston
Largest metropolitan areaGreater Houston
Population
 • Total64,008,345[1]

The economy of the Gulf Coast area is dominated by industries related to energy, petrochemicals, fishing, aerospace, agriculture, and tourism. The large cities of the region are (from west to east) Brownsville, Corpus Christi, Houston, Galveston, Beaumont, Lake Charles, Lafayette, Baton Rouge, New Orleans, Gulfport, Biloxi, Mobile, Pensacola, Navarre, St. Petersburg, and Tampa. All are the centers or major cities of their respective metropolitan areas and many of which contain large ports.

Geography edit

 
Houston is the largest city and urban area along the Gulf Coast

The Gulf Coast is made of many inlets, bays, and lagoons. The coast is intersected by numerous rivers, the largest of which is the Mississippi River. Much of the land along the Gulf Coast is, or was, marshland.[3] Ringing the Gulf Coast is the Gulf Coastal Plain, which reaches from Southern Texas to the western Florida Panhandle, while the western portions of the Gulf Coast are made up of many barrier islands and peninsulas, including the 130-mile (210 km) Padre Island along the Texas coast. These landforms protect numerous bays and inlets providing as a barrier to oncoming waves. The central part of the Gulf Coast, from eastern Texas through Louisiana, consists primarily of marshland. The eastern part of the Gulf Coast, predominantly Florida, is dotted with many bays and inlets.

Climate edit

 
Night time astronaut image of the northern Gulf coast.

The Gulf Coast climate is humid subtropical, although Southwest Florida features a tropical climate. Much of the year is warm to hot along the Gulf Coast, while the three winter months bring periods of cool (or rarely, cold) weather mixed with mild temperatures. The area is highly vulnerable to hurricanes as well as floods and severe thunderstorms. Much of the Gulf Coast has a summer precipitation maximum, with July or August commonly the wettest month due to the combination of frequent summer thunderstorms produced by relentless heat and humidity, and tropical weather systems (tropical depressions, tropical storms and hurricanes), while winter and early spring rainfall also can be heavy. This pattern is evident in southern cites as Houston, Texas; New Orleans, Louisiana; Mobile, Alabama; and Pensacola, Florida. However, the central and southern Florida peninsula and South Texas has a pronounced winter dry season, as at Tampa and Fort Myers, Florida. On the central and southern Texas coast, winter, early spring and mid-summer are markedly drier, and September is the wettest month on average (as at Corpus Christi and Brownsville, Texas). Tornadoes are infrequent at the coast but do occur; however, they occur more frequently in inland portions of Gulf Coast states. Over most of the Gulf Coast from Houston, Texas, eastward, extreme rainfall events are a significant threat, commonly from tropical weather systems, which can bring 4 to 10 or more inches of rain in a single day. In August 2017, Hurricane Harvey made landfall along the central Texas coast, then migrated to and stalled over the greater Houston area for several days, producing extreme, unprecedented rainfall totals of over 40 inches (1,000 mm) in many areas, unleashing widespread flooding. Climate scientists predict more hurricanes for Florida[4] and the Texas coastline in particular.[5] Earthquakes are extremely rare to the area, but a 6.0 earthquake in the Gulf of Mexico on September 10, 2006, could be felt from the cities of New Orleans to Tampa.

Rising sea levels edit

Due to the release of greenhouse gas emissions, glaciers and ice sheets are melting and expanding the oceans. The United States coastlines are projected to rise 1 foot in three decades or between 10 and 12 inches on average by 2050.[6] The Gulf Coast will likely see the biggest change, with sea levels expected to rise between 14 and 18 inches. The Global and Regional Sea Level Rise Report predicted more frequent, major and destructive high tide flooding events along with taller storm surges by 2050 after scientists determined high tide flooding has been "increasingly common" over the past few years due to the rising sea levels.[6] The impacts are expected to be dramatic. Low-lying coastal areas are expected to experience multiple factors, including increased levels of flooding, accelerated erosion, loss of wetlands and low-lying terrestrial ecosystems, and seawater intrusion into freshwater sources. Rising sea level and erosion will also imperil critical habitats for many commercially important fisheries that depend on inshore waters for either permanent residence or nursery area.[7] In 2021 alone rising sea levels cost the United States approximately $2.6 billion in relief efforts and caused at least seven deaths.[6] By 2051, the cost of flood damage is expected to increase by 61%, or $32 billion.[8]

Economic activities edit

 
NOAA map of the 3,856 oil and gas platforms extant off the Gulf Coast in 2006.

The Gulf Coast is a major center of economic activity. The marshlands along the Louisiana and Texas coasts provide breeding grounds and nurseries for ocean life that drive the fishing and shrimping industries. The Port of South Louisiana (Metropolitan New Orleans in Laplace) and the Port of Houston are two of the ten busiest ports in the world by cargo volume.[9] As of 2004, seven of the top ten busiest ports in the U.S. are on the Gulf Coast.[10]

The discovery of oil and gas deposits along the coast and offshore, combined with easy access to shipping, have made the Gulf Coast the heart of the U.S. petrochemical industry. The coast contains nearly 4,000 oil platforms.

Besides the above, the region features other important industries including aerospace and biomedical research, as well as older industries such as agriculture and — especially since the development of the Gulf Coast beginning in the 1920s and the increase in wealth throughout the United States — tourism.

History edit

 
Map of the Louisiana Purchase

Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita have destroyed a number of museums and archives in the Gulf Coast. In 2008 floods in Iowa destroyed the local Flood Museum which held materials from the Great Mississippi and Missouri Rivers Flood of 1993.[11]

Before European settlers arrived in the region, the Gulf Coast was home to several pre-Columbian kingdoms which had extensive trade networks with empires such as the Aztecs and the Mississippi Mound Builders. Shark and alligator teeth and shells from the Gulf have been found as far north as Ohio, in the mounds of the Hopewell culture.[12]

The first Europeans to settle the Gulf Coast were primarily the French and the Spanish. The Louisiana Purchase (1803), Adams–Onís Treaty (1819) and the Texas Revolution (1835-1836) made the Gulf Coast a part of the United States during the first half of the 19th century. As the U.S. population continued to expand its frontiers westward, the Gulf Coast was a natural magnet in the South providing access to shipping lanes and both national and international commerce. The development of sugar and cotton production (enabled by slavery) allowed the South to prosper. By the mid 19th century the city of New Orleans, being situated as a key to commerce on the Mississippi River and in the Gulf, had become the largest U.S. city not on the Atlantic seaboard and the fourth largest in the U.S. overall.

Two major events were turning points in the earlier history of the Gulf Coast region. The first was the American Civil War, which caused severe damage to some economic sectors in the South, including the Gulf Coast. The second event was the Galveston Hurricane of 1900. At the end of the 19th century Galveston was, with New Orleans, one of the most developed cities in the region. The city had the third busiest port in the U.S.[13] and its financial district was known as the "Wall Street of the South".[14]

 
Hurricane Katrina

Since then the Gulf Coast has been hit with numerous other hurricanes. On August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast as a Category 3 hurricane. It was the most damaging storm in the history of the United States, causing upwards of $80 billion in damages, and leaving over 1,800 dead. Again in 2008 the Gulf Coast was struck by a catastrophic hurricane. Due to its immense size, Hurricane Ike caused devastation from the Louisiana coastline all the way to the Kenedy County, Texas, region near Corpus Christi.[15] In addition, Ike caused flooding and significant damage along the Mississippi coastline and the Florida Panhandle[16] Ike killed 112 people and left upwards of 300 people missing, never to be found.[17] Hurricane Ike was the third most damaging storm in the history of the United States, causing more than $25 billion[18] in damage along the coast, leaving hundreds of thousands of people homeless, and sparking the largest search-and-rescue operation in U.S. history.[19]

Other than the hurricanes, the Gulf Coast has redeveloped dramatically over the course of the 20th century. The gulf coast is highly populated. The petrochemical industry, launched with the major discoveries of oil in Texas and spurred on by further discoveries in the Gulf waters, has been a vehicle for development in the central and western Gulf which has spawned development on a variety of fronts in these regions. Texas in particular has benefited tremendously from this industry over the course of the 20th century and economic diversification has made the state a magnet for population and home to more Fortune 500 companies than any other U.S. state. Florida has grown as well, driven to a great extent by its long established tourism industry but also by its position as a gateway to the Caribbean and Latin America. As of 2006, these two states are the second and fourth most populous states in the nation, respectively (see this article). Other areas of the Gulf Coast have benefited less, though economic development fueled by tourism has greatly increased property values along the coast, and is now a severe danger to the valuable but fragile ecosystems of the Gulf Coast.

Metropolitan areas edit

The following table lists the 11 largest core-based statistical areas along the Gulf Coast.

Metropolitan statistical areas on the United States Gulf Coast
Rank Metropolitan statistical area 2020 pop. (est.)
1 Houston-The Woodlands, TX Combined Statistical Area 7,340,823
2 Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL Metropolitan Statistical Area 3,243,963
3 New Orleans-Metairie-Hammond, LA-MS Combined Statistical Area 1,510,672
4 Cape Coral-Fort Myers-Naples, FL Combined Statistical Area 1,226,553
5 North Port-Sarasota, FL Combined Statistical Area 1,087,915
6 McAllen-Edinburg, TX Combined Statistical Area 939,466
7 Baton Rouge, LA Metropolitan Statistical Area 858,571
8 Mobile-Daphne-Fairhope, AL Combined Statistical Area 661,964
9 Lafayette-Opelousas-Morgan City, LA Combined Statistical Area 619,529
10 Pensacola-Ferry Pass, FL-AL Combined Statistical Area 547,784
11 Corpus Christi-Kingsville-Alice, TX Combined Statistical Area 536,258

Transportation edit

Road edit

Major Interstates edit

 
I-45 and I-10/U.S. 90 near Downtown Houston

Major U.S. routes edit

Other significant routes edit

Air edit

International service edit

 
Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport

International destinations

George Bush Intercontinental Airport - Houston  Argentina,  Bahamas,  Belize,  Bonaire,  Brazil,  Canada,  Cayman Islands,  Chile,  China,  Colombia,  Costa Rica,  Dominican Republic,  Ecuador,  El Salvador,  France,  Germany,  Guatemala,  Honduras,  Jamaica,  Japan,  Mexico,  Netherlands,  New Zealand,  Nicaragua,  Nigeria,  Norway,  Panama,  Peru,  Qatar,  Russia,  Singapore,  Trinidad and Tobago, Turkey,  Turks and Caicos Islands,  UAE,  United Kingdom,  Venezuela
Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport  Canada,  France,  Germany,  Honduras,  Mexico,  Panama,  United Kingdom
Southwest Florida International Airport  Canada,  Germany
Tampa International Airport  Bahamas,  Canada,  Cayman Islands,  Cuba,  Dominican Republic,  Germany,  Iceland,  Jamaica,  Mexico,  Panama,  Switzerland,  United Kingdom
William P. Hobby Airport - Houston  Aruba,  Belize,  Cayman Islands,  Costa Rica,  Dominican Republic,  Jamaica,  Mexico

Rail edit

Amtrak service edit

 
Sunset Limited at Houston.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Gulf States 2020". Retrieved April 12, 2020.
  2. ^ For example: (PDF) (Spring 2017 ed.). Center for Energy Studies. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 14, 2018. Retrieved April 13, 2018 – via Economics & Policy Research Group., p. 1 (" Unless stated otherwise, Gulf Coast hereafter specifically refers to the states of Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida").
  3. ^ "Gulf Coast Wetlands Rapidly Declining • The National Wildlife Federation Blog". The National Wildlife Federation Blog. January 8, 2014. Retrieved March 4, 2021.
  4. ^ See "Projected change in U.S. hurricane risk based on Risk Analysis Framework for Tropical Cyclones (RAFT)." Fig. 1 op cit
  5. ^ Karthik Balaguru et al. , "Increased U.S. coastal hurricane risk under climate change." Science Advances. 9,(2023). 14. DOI:10.1126/sciadv.adf0259. Science.org website Retrieved 17 Aug 2023.
  6. ^ a b c B. Powell, Tori (February 19, 2022). "Sea levels along U.S. coastlines to rise more than a foot by 2050, study projects". CBS News. Retrieved August 30, 2023.
  7. ^ "Predicting Impacts of Sea Level Rise in the Northern Gulf of Mexico". coastalscience.noaa.gov. Retrieved August 30, 2023.
  8. ^ Jacobo, Julia (February 22, 2021). "Climate change, rising sea levels to increase cost of flood damage by $34 billion in coming decades: Report". ABC News. Retrieved August 30, 2023.
  9. ^ Rosenberg, Matt (June 14, 2003). "Busiest Ports in the World". Retrieved October 15, 2006.
  10. ^ Rosenberg, Matt (June 14, 2003). . Archived from the original on November 17, 2006. Retrieved October 15, 2006.
  11. ^ Sarah S. Brophy; Elizabeth Wylie (2013). The Green Museum: A Primer on Environmental Practice. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 7. ISBN 9780759123229.
  12. ^ Nash, Gary B. Red, White and Black: The Peoples of Early North America Los Angeles 2015 p. 6
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on July 11, 2006. Retrieved July 11, 2006.
  14. ^ "Galveston, Texas History". Galveston.com. Retrieved October 15, 2007.
  15. ^ "Evacuation and Devastation in Southern Texas". The Boston Globe. Retrieved March 28, 2014.
  16. ^ "Flooding in Miss. and FL". USA Today. September 11, 2008. Retrieved March 28, 2014.
  17. ^ "Ike missing". www.cnn.com. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  18. ^ Robbie Berg (January 23, 2009). "Hurricane Ike Tropical Cyclone Report" (PDF). NHC. Retrieved September 12, 2009.
  19. ^ Ike Evacuation and Rescue Operation 2013-12-02 at the Wayback Machine

Further reading edit

  • Drescher, Christopher F., Stefan E. Schulenberg, and C. Veronica Smith. "The Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and the Mississippi Gulf Coast: Mental health in the context of a technological disaster." American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 84.2 (2014): 142.
  • Smith, F. Todd Louisiana and the Gulf South Frontier, 1500–1821 (Louisiana State University Press; 2014) 304 pages
  • Williamson, James M., and John L. Pender. "Economic Stimulus and the Tax Code The Impact of the Gulf Opportunity Zone." Public Finance Review (2014): 1091142114557724.

External links edit

gulf, coast, united, states, gulf, coast, redirects, here, other, uses, gulf, coast, disambiguation, also, known, gulf, south, south, coast, coastline, along, southern, united, states, where, they, meet, gulf, mexico, coastal, states, that, have, shoreline, gu. Gulf Coast redirects here For other uses see Gulf Coast disambiguation The Gulf Coast of the United States also known as the Gulf South or the South Coast is the coastline along the Southern United States where they meet the Gulf of Mexico The coastal states that have a shoreline on the Gulf of Mexico are Texas Louisiana Mississippi Alabama and Florida and these are known as the Gulf States 2 Gulf CoastCoastlineStates that border the Gulf of Mexico are shown in red Country United StatesStates Alabama Florida Louisiana Mississippi TexasPrincipal citiesHoustonTampa MobileNew OrleansPensacolaGulfportTallahasseeLargest cityHoustonLargest metropolitan areaGreater HoustonPopulation Total64 008 345 1 The economy of the Gulf Coast area is dominated by industries related to energy petrochemicals fishing aerospace agriculture and tourism The large cities of the region are from west to east Brownsville Corpus Christi Houston Galveston Beaumont Lake Charles Lafayette Baton Rouge New Orleans Gulfport Biloxi Mobile Pensacola Navarre St Petersburg and Tampa All are the centers or major cities of their respective metropolitan areas and many of which contain large ports Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Climate 1 2 Rising sea levels 2 Economic activities 3 History 4 Metropolitan areas 5 Transportation 5 1 Road 5 1 1 Major Interstates 5 1 2 Major U S routes 5 1 3 Other significant routes 5 2 Air 5 2 1 International service 5 3 Rail 5 3 1 Amtrak service 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Further reading 9 External linksGeography edit nbsp Houston is the largest city and urban area along the Gulf CoastThe Gulf Coast is made of many inlets bays and lagoons The coast is intersected by numerous rivers the largest of which is the Mississippi River Much of the land along the Gulf Coast is or was marshland 3 Ringing the Gulf Coast is the Gulf Coastal Plain which reaches from Southern Texas to the western Florida Panhandle while the western portions of the Gulf Coast are made up of many barrier islands and peninsulas including the 130 mile 210 km Padre Island along the Texas coast These landforms protect numerous bays and inlets providing as a barrier to oncoming waves The central part of the Gulf Coast from eastern Texas through Louisiana consists primarily of marshland The eastern part of the Gulf Coast predominantly Florida is dotted with many bays and inlets Climate edit nbsp Night time astronaut image of the northern Gulf coast The Gulf Coast climate is humid subtropical although Southwest Florida features a tropical climate Much of the year is warm to hot along the Gulf Coast while the three winter months bring periods of cool or rarely cold weather mixed with mild temperatures The area is highly vulnerable to hurricanes as well as floods and severe thunderstorms Much of the Gulf Coast has a summer precipitation maximum with July or August commonly the wettest month due to the combination of frequent summer thunderstorms produced by relentless heat and humidity and tropical weather systems tropical depressions tropical storms and hurricanes while winter and early spring rainfall also can be heavy This pattern is evident in southern cites as Houston Texas New Orleans Louisiana Mobile Alabama and Pensacola Florida However the central and southern Florida peninsula and South Texas has a pronounced winter dry season as at Tampa and Fort Myers Florida On the central and southern Texas coast winter early spring and mid summer are markedly drier and September is the wettest month on average as at Corpus Christi and Brownsville Texas Tornadoes are infrequent at the coast but do occur however they occur more frequently in inland portions of Gulf Coast states Over most of the Gulf Coast from Houston Texas eastward extreme rainfall events are a significant threat commonly from tropical weather systems which can bring 4 to 10 or more inches of rain in a single day In August 2017 Hurricane Harvey made landfall along the central Texas coast then migrated to and stalled over the greater Houston area for several days producing extreme unprecedented rainfall totals of over 40 inches 1 000 mm in many areas unleashing widespread flooding Climate scientists predict more hurricanes for Florida 4 and the Texas coastline in particular 5 Earthquakes are extremely rare to the area but a 6 0 earthquake in the Gulf of Mexico on September 10 2006 could be felt from the cities of New Orleans to Tampa Rising sea levels edit Due to the release of greenhouse gas emissions glaciers and ice sheets are melting and expanding the oceans The United States coastlines are projected to rise 1 foot in three decades or between 10 and 12 inches on average by 2050 6 The Gulf Coast will likely see the biggest change with sea levels expected to rise between 14 and 18 inches The Global and Regional Sea Level Rise Report predicted more frequent major and destructive high tide flooding events along with taller storm surges by 2050 after scientists determined high tide flooding has been increasingly common over the past few years due to the rising sea levels 6 The impacts are expected to be dramatic Low lying coastal areas are expected to experience multiple factors including increased levels of flooding accelerated erosion loss of wetlands and low lying terrestrial ecosystems and seawater intrusion into freshwater sources Rising sea level and erosion will also imperil critical habitats for many commercially important fisheries that depend on inshore waters for either permanent residence or nursery area 7 In 2021 alone rising sea levels cost the United States approximately 2 6 billion in relief efforts and caused at least seven deaths 6 By 2051 the cost of flood damage is expected to increase by 61 or 32 billion 8 Economic activities edit nbsp NOAA map of the 3 856 oil and gas platforms extant off the Gulf Coast in 2006 The Gulf Coast is a major center of economic activity The marshlands along the Louisiana and Texas coasts provide breeding grounds and nurseries for ocean life that drive the fishing and shrimping industries The Port of South Louisiana Metropolitan New Orleans in Laplace and the Port of Houston are two of the ten busiest ports in the world by cargo volume 9 As of 2004 seven of the top ten busiest ports in the U S are on the Gulf Coast 10 The discovery of oil and gas deposits along the coast and offshore combined with easy access to shipping have made the Gulf Coast the heart of the U S petrochemical industry The coast contains nearly 4 000 oil platforms Besides the above the region features other important industries including aerospace and biomedical research as well as older industries such as agriculture and especially since the development of the Gulf Coast beginning in the 1920s and the increase in wealth throughout the United States tourism History edit nbsp Map of the Louisiana PurchaseHurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita have destroyed a number of museums and archives in the Gulf Coast In 2008 floods in Iowa destroyed the local Flood Museum which held materials from the Great Mississippi and Missouri Rivers Flood of 1993 11 Before European settlers arrived in the region the Gulf Coast was home to several pre Columbian kingdoms which had extensive trade networks with empires such as the Aztecs and the Mississippi Mound Builders Shark and alligator teeth and shells from the Gulf have been found as far north as Ohio in the mounds of the Hopewell culture 12 The first Europeans to settle the Gulf Coast were primarily the French and the Spanish The Louisiana Purchase 1803 Adams Onis Treaty 1819 and the Texas Revolution 1835 1836 made the Gulf Coast a part of the United States during the first half of the 19th century As the U S population continued to expand its frontiers westward the Gulf Coast was a natural magnet in the South providing access to shipping lanes and both national and international commerce The development of sugar and cotton production enabled by slavery allowed the South to prosper By the mid 19th century the city of New Orleans being situated as a key to commerce on the Mississippi River and in the Gulf had become the largest U S city not on the Atlantic seaboard and the fourth largest in the U S overall Two major events were turning points in the earlier history of the Gulf Coast region The first was the American Civil War which caused severe damage to some economic sectors in the South including the Gulf Coast The second event was the Galveston Hurricane of 1900 At the end of the 19th century Galveston was with New Orleans one of the most developed cities in the region The city had the third busiest port in the U S 13 and its financial district was known as the Wall Street of the South 14 nbsp Hurricane KatrinaSince then the Gulf Coast has been hit with numerous other hurricanes On August 29 2005 Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast as a Category 3 hurricane It was the most damaging storm in the history of the United States causing upwards of 80 billion in damages and leaving over 1 800 dead Again in 2008 the Gulf Coast was struck by a catastrophic hurricane Due to its immense size Hurricane Ike caused devastation from the Louisiana coastline all the way to the Kenedy County Texas region near Corpus Christi 15 In addition Ike caused flooding and significant damage along the Mississippi coastline and the Florida Panhandle 16 Ike killed 112 people and left upwards of 300 people missing never to be found 17 Hurricane Ike was the third most damaging storm in the history of the United States causing more than 25 billion 18 in damage along the coast leaving hundreds of thousands of people homeless and sparking the largest search and rescue operation in U S history 19 Other than the hurricanes the Gulf Coast has redeveloped dramatically over the course of the 20th century The gulf coast is highly populated The petrochemical industry launched with the major discoveries of oil in Texas and spurred on by further discoveries in the Gulf waters has been a vehicle for development in the central and western Gulf which has spawned development on a variety of fronts in these regions Texas in particular has benefited tremendously from this industry over the course of the 20th century and economic diversification has made the state a magnet for population and home to more Fortune 500 companies than any other U S state Florida has grown as well driven to a great extent by its long established tourism industry but also by its position as a gateway to the Caribbean and Latin America As of 2006 these two states are the second and fourth most populous states in the nation respectively see this article Other areas of the Gulf Coast have benefited less though economic development fueled by tourism has greatly increased property values along the coast and is now a severe danger to the valuable but fragile ecosystems of the Gulf Coast Metropolitan areas editThe following table lists the 11 largest core based statistical areas along the Gulf Coast Metropolitan statistical areas on the United States Gulf Coast Rank Metropolitan statistical area 2020 pop est 1 Houston The Woodlands TX Combined Statistical Area 7 340 8232 Tampa St Petersburg Clearwater FL Metropolitan Statistical Area 3 243 9633 New Orleans Metairie Hammond LA MS Combined Statistical Area 1 510 6724 Cape Coral Fort Myers Naples FL Combined Statistical Area 1 226 5535 North Port Sarasota FL Combined Statistical Area 1 087 9156 McAllen Edinburg TX Combined Statistical Area 939 4667 Baton Rouge LA Metropolitan Statistical Area 858 5718 Mobile Daphne Fairhope AL Combined Statistical Area 661 9649 Lafayette Opelousas Morgan City LA Combined Statistical Area 619 52910 Pensacola Ferry Pass FL AL Combined Statistical Area 547 78411 Corpus Christi Kingsville Alice TX Combined Statistical Area 536 258Transportation editRoad edit Major Interstates edit nbsp I 45 and I 10 U S 90 near Downtown HoustonHighway Significant cities served nbsp Interstate 2 Harlingen McAllen nbsp Interstate 4 Tampa nbsp Interstate 10 Houston Baytown Beaumont Lake Charles Lafayette Baton Rouge New Orleans Slidell Gulfport Biloxi Mobile Pensacola nbsp Interstate 12 Baton Rouge Hammond Slidell nbsp Interstate 37 Corpus Christi nbsp Interstate 45 Galveston Houston nbsp Interstate 49 New Orleans future Houma future Thibodaux future Lafayette nbsp Interstate 55 Hammond nbsp Interstate 59 Slidell nbsp Interstate 65 Mobile nbsp Interstate 69 Victoria future Houston nbsp Interstate 69E Brownsville Harlingen Corpus Christi Victoria future nbsp Interstate 69W Victoria future nbsp Interstate 75 Naples Fort Myers North Port Sarasota Bradenton St Petersburg TampaMajor U S routes edit Highway Significant cities served nbsp U S 11 New Orleans nbsp U S 17 Punta Gorda nbsp U S 19 St Petersburg Tampa nbsp U S 29 Pensacola nbsp U S 31 Spanish Fort nbsp U S 41 Naples Fort Myers Sarasota Bradenton St Petersburg Tampa nbsp U S 43 Mobile nbsp U S 45 Mobile nbsp U S 49 Biloxi Gulfport nbsp U S 51 Hammond nbsp U S 59 Houston Victoria nbsp U S 61 New Orleans nbsp U S 69 Beaumont Port Arthur nbsp U S 77 Brownsville Corpus Christi Harlingen Victoria nbsp U S 83 Brownsville Harlingen nbsp U S 87 Port Lavaca Victoria nbsp U S 90 Beaumont Biloxi Crestview Houma Houston Lafayette Lake Charles Mobile New Orleans Pascagoula Pensacola Thibodaux nbsp U S 92 St Petersburg Tampa nbsp U S 96 Beaumont Port Arthur nbsp U S 98 Fort Walton Beach Mobile Pensacola Panama CityOther significant routes edit Highway Significant cities served nbsp LA 1 Grand Isle Port Fourchon Thibodaux nbsp S R 85 Crestview Fort Walton Beach nbsp S H 35 Houston Bay City Port Lavaca Rockport Corpus Christi nbsp S H 288 Houston Lake Jackson FreeportAir edit International service edit nbsp Louis Armstrong New Orleans International AirportInternational destinations George Bush Intercontinental Airport Houston nbsp Argentina nbsp Bahamas nbsp Belize nbsp Bonaire nbsp Brazil nbsp Canada nbsp Cayman Islands nbsp Chile nbsp China nbsp Colombia nbsp Costa Rica nbsp Dominican Republic nbsp Ecuador nbsp El Salvador nbsp France nbsp Germany nbsp Guatemala nbsp Honduras nbsp Jamaica nbsp Japan nbsp Mexico nbsp Netherlands nbsp New Zealand nbsp Nicaragua nbsp Nigeria nbsp Norway nbsp Panama nbsp Peru nbsp Qatar nbsp Russia nbsp Singapore nbsp Trinidad and Tobago nbsp Turkey nbsp Turks and Caicos Islands nbsp UAE nbsp United Kingdom nbsp VenezuelaLouis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport nbsp Canada nbsp France nbsp Germany nbsp Honduras nbsp Mexico nbsp Panama nbsp United KingdomSouthwest Florida International Airport nbsp Canada nbsp GermanyTampa International Airport nbsp Bahamas nbsp Canada nbsp Cayman Islands nbsp Cuba nbsp Dominican Republic nbsp Germany nbsp Iceland nbsp Jamaica nbsp Mexico nbsp Panama nbsp Switzerland nbsp United KingdomWilliam P Hobby Airport Houston nbsp Aruba nbsp Belize nbsp Cayman Islands nbsp Costa Rica nbsp Dominican Republic nbsp Jamaica nbsp MexicoRail edit Amtrak service edit nbsp Sunset Limited at Houston Train Route Gulf Coast cities servedCity of New Orleans Chicago to New Orleans New OrleansCrescent New York to New Orleans New Orleans Picayune MS Slidell LASilver Star New York to Miami Tampa with connection available to Amtrak Thruway to Clearwater FL Bradenton FL Sarasota FL Port Charlotte FL and Fort Myers FLSunset Limited Los Angeles to Orlando temporarily New Orleans Bay St Louis MS Beaumont TX Biloxi Crestview FL Gulfport MS Houston Lafayette LA Lake Charles LA Baton Rouge LA Mobile New Orleans Panama City FL Scriever LA Pascagoula MS Pensacola FLSee also edit nbsp United States portalEast Coast of the United States West Coast of the United States Emerald Coast Florida Panhandle Geography of the United States Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Task Force Gulf States Marine Fisheries Commission Houston List of ports in the United States Megaregions of the United States Mississippi Gulf Coast New Orleans Tampa West Florida Gulf Coast of MexicoNotes edit Gulf States 2020 Retrieved April 12 2020 For example Gulf Coast Energy Outlook PDF Spring 2017 ed Center for Energy Studies Archived from the original PDF on April 14 2018 Retrieved April 13 2018 via Economics amp Policy Research Group p 1 Unless stated otherwise Gulf Coast hereafter specifically refers to the states of Texas Louisiana Mississippi Alabama and Florida Gulf Coast Wetlands Rapidly Declining The National Wildlife Federation Blog The National Wildlife Federation Blog January 8 2014 Retrieved March 4 2021 See Projected change in U S hurricane risk based on Risk Analysis Framework for Tropical Cyclones RAFT Fig 1 op cit Karthik Balaguru et al Increased U S coastal hurricane risk under climate change Science Advances 9 2023 14 DOI 10 1126 sciadv adf0259 Science org website Retrieved 17 Aug 2023 a b c B Powell Tori February 19 2022 Sea levels along U S coastlines to rise more than a foot by 2050 study projects CBS News Retrieved August 30 2023 Predicting Impacts of Sea Level Rise in the Northern Gulf of Mexico coastalscience noaa gov Retrieved August 30 2023 Jacobo Julia February 22 2021 Climate change rising sea levels to increase cost of flood damage by 34 billion in coming decades Report ABC News Retrieved August 30 2023 Rosenberg Matt June 14 2003 Busiest Ports in the World Retrieved October 15 2006 Rosenberg Matt June 14 2003 Waterborne Commerce Statistics Tonnage for Selected U S Ports in 2004 Archived from the original on November 17 2006 Retrieved October 15 2006 Sarah S Brophy Elizabeth Wylie 2013 The Green Museum A Primer on Environmental Practice Bloomsbury Publishing p 7 ISBN 9780759123229 Nash Gary B Red White and Black The Peoples of Early North America Los Angeles 2015 p 6 The 1900 Storm Archived from the original on July 11 2006 Retrieved July 11 2006 Galveston Texas History Galveston com Retrieved October 15 2007 Evacuation and Devastation in Southern Texas The Boston Globe Retrieved March 28 2014 Flooding in Miss and FL USA Today September 11 2008 Retrieved March 28 2014 Ike missing www cnn com Retrieved January 14 2020 Robbie Berg January 23 2009 Hurricane Ike Tropical Cyclone Report PDF NHC Retrieved September 12 2009 Ike Evacuation and Rescue Operation Archived 2013 12 02 at the Wayback MachineFurther reading editDrescher Christopher F Stefan E Schulenberg and C Veronica Smith The Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and the Mississippi Gulf Coast Mental health in the context of a technological disaster American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 84 2 2014 142 Smith F Todd Louisiana and the Gulf South Frontier 1500 1821 Louisiana State University Press 2014 304 pages Williamson James M and John L Pender Economic Stimulus and the Tax Code The Impact of the Gulf Opportunity Zone Public Finance Review 2014 1091142114557724 External links edit Map of the Gulf Coast from Florida to Mexico from 1639 via the World Digital Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gulf Coast of the United States amp oldid 1188127248, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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