Wind Advisory
from SAT 12:00 PM MST until SAT 10:00 PM MST, Western Pima County including Ajo/Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, Tohono O'odham Nation including Sells, Upper Santa Cruz River and Altar Valleys including Nogales, Tucson Metro Area including Tucson/Green Valley/Marana/Vail, South Central Pinal County including Eloy/Picacho Peak State Park, Southeast Pinal County including Kearny/Mammoth/Oracle, Upper San Pedro River Valley including Sierra Vista/Benson, Eastern Cochise County below 5000 ft including Douglas/Wilcox, Upper Gila River and Aravaipa Valleys including Clifton/Safford, White Mountains of Graham and Greenlee Counties including Hannagan Meadow, Galiuro and Pinaleno Mountains including Mount Graham, Chiricahua Mountains including Chiricahua National Monument, Dragoon/Mule/Huachuca and Santa Rita Mountains including Bisbee/Canelo Hills/Madera Canyon, Santa Catalina and Rincon Mountains including Mount Lemmon/Summerhaven, Baboquivari Mountains including Kitt Peak, Kofa, Central La Paz, Aguila Valley, Southeast Yuma County, Gila River Valley, Northwest Valley, Tonopah Desert, Gila Bend, Buckeye/Avondale, Cave Creek/New River, Deer Valley, Central Phoenix, North Phoenix/Glendale, New River Mesa, Scottsdale/Paradise Valley, Rio Verde/Salt River, East Valley, Fountain Hills/East Mesa, South Mountain/Ahwatukee, Southeast Valley/Queen Creek, Superior, Northwest Pinal County, West Pinal County, Apache Junction/Gold Canyon, Tonto Basin, Mazatzal Mountains, Pinal/Superstition Mountains, Sonoran Desert Natl Monument, San Carlos, Dripping Springs, Globe/Miami, Southeast Gila County

NOAA maps show street-by-street views of Hurricane Michael's destruction

The images were already jaw-dropping, but the extent of Hurricane Michael's impact to the Florida Panhandle is becoming more detailed now that the federal government is publishing aerial photos taken during recent survey flights.

Imagery posted on an interactive map was taken by NOAA's Remote Sensing Division to support homeland security and emergency response needs after the storm. The photos - taken during long sweeps by airplanes starting on Thursday - show a street-level view of a 250-mile stretch of the Gulf Coast's barrier islands, from Gulf Shores in Alabama to Carrabelle in Florida.

LINK: See NOAA's damage map

The imagery shows the near total destruction of Mexico Beach and heavy damage to nearby Tyndall Air Force Base. Much of that area has been dramatically documented already, but the map also shows the greater Panama City area. Heavily damaged homes can be seen in neighborhoods several miles inland.

Further west, where the damage is not was bad, beachgoers can be seen enjoying the sand and surf.

NOAA says the website will be updated as more flights take place.

Hurricane Michael made landfall Wednesday as a powerful Category 4 storm, still intensifying as it came ashore with 155-mph winds and a 9-foot storm surge. At least 11 deaths have been blamed on the storm.

NOAA's interactive damage map can be found at https://storms.ngs.noaa.gov/storms/michael/index.html. Note that it may be easier to navigate the site from a desktop computer instead of a mobile device.

More details: https://storms.ngs.noaa.gov/