1979 Pacific typhoon season

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The 1979 Pacific typhoon season has no official bounds; it ran year-round in 1979, but most tropical cyclones tend to form in the northwestern Pacific Ocean between June and December. These dates conventionally delimit the period of each year when most tropical cyclones form in the northwestern Pacific Ocean.

The scope of this article is limited to the Pacific Ocean, north of the equator and west of the international date line. Storms that form east of the date line and north of the equator are called hurricanes; see 1979 Pacific hurricane season. Tropical Storms formed in the entire west Pacific basin were assigned a name by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center. Tropical depressions in this basin have the "W" suffix added to their number. Tropical depressions that enter or form in the Philippine area of responsibility are assigned a name by the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration or PAGASA. This can often result in the same storm having two names.

Contents

[edit] Storms

28 tropical depressions formed this year in the Western Pacific, of which 23 became tropical storms. 14 storms reached typhoon intensity, of which 4 reached super typhoon strength.

[edit] Typhoon Alice

Typhoon Alice 3
{{{image}}} Alice 1979 track.png
Duration January 01January 14, 1979
Intensity 125 mph [1], 930 mbar[1]

Very early on January 1 a tropical depression developed over the low latitudes of the open West Pacific. It tracked northwestward, reaching tropical storm strength that night and typhoon strength on the 5th. Alice turned to the west, and continued to intensify with generally favorable conditions to a peak of 130 mph winds on the 8th. Cooler, drier air to the north caused Alice to weaken to a minimal typhoon, but as the typhoon turned to the northwest it briefly re-strengthened to a 115 mph typhoon on the 11th. Upper level winds, combined with the dry air, weakened Alice for good, causing it to dissipate on the 14th after stalling for three days. Alice caused extensive damage in the Marshall Islands, causing her name to be retired.

[edit] Typhoon Bess

Typhoon Bess 2
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Duration March 20March 25, 1979
Intensity 105 mph [1], 958 mbar[1]

[edit] Typhoon Cecil

Typhoon Cecil 1
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Duration April 11April 20, 1979
Intensity 95 mph [1], 965 mbar[1]

[edit] Tropical Storm Dot

Tropical Storm Dot TS
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Duration May 10May 16, 1979
Intensity 45 mph [1], 984 mbar[1]

[edit] Typhoon Ellis

Typhoon Ellis 2
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Duration July 01July 06, 1979
Intensity 100 mph [1], 955 mbar[1]

[edit] Tropical Storm Faye

Tropical Storm Faye TS
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Duration July 01July 06, 1979
Intensity 45 mph [1], 998 mbar[1]

[edit] Tropical Storm Gordon

Tropical Storm Gordon TS
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Duration July 26July 29, 1979
Intensity 70 mph [1], 980 mbar[1]

[edit] Super Typhoon Hope

Super Typhoon Hope 4
{{{image}}} Hope 1979 track.png
Duration July 27August 03, 1979
Intensity 150 mph [1], 898 mbar[1]

A tropical depression formed southeast of Guam on July 24. It headed to the west-northwest, but upper level shear from the TUTT caused the depression to dissipate on the 27th. It turned northward then westward, where it regenerated on the 28th. Intensification became more steady, with the depression reaching storm strength on the 28th and typhoon strength on the 29th. On the 31st, Hope reached a peak of 150 mph winds, but land interaction with Taiwan to the north weakened the storm. On August 2 95 mph Typhoon Hope hit southern China, only 10 miles east of Hong Kong. It weakened over the country while moving westward, but retained its satellite signature. Upon reaching the Bay of Bengal on the 7th, Hope restrengthened to a tropical storm, but moved over India and dissipated on the 8th. In Guangdong Province in China, the typhoon was responsible for around 100 deaths or missing people. Twelve people died along with 260 injured in Hong Kong. This was the strongest tropical cyclone to hit Hong Kong since Typhoon Rose in 1971.

[edit] Typhoon Irving

Typhoon Irving 2
{{{image}}} Irving 1979 track.png
Duration August 09August 18, 1979
Intensity 105 mph [1], 954 mbar[1]

The monsoon trough spawned a tropical depression on August 7 east of the Philippines. It tracked to the north then to the west. Steering currents weakened, causing the depression to loop to the north. It was able to strengthen there, reaching tropical storm status on the 11th and typhoon status on the 13th. Irving continued to the north, attaining a peak of 100 mph winds on the 15th. Its broad, loose wind field prevented it from strengthening further, and Irving weakened as it continued northward. On the 17th, Irving hit southwest South Korea as a minimal typhoon, and merged with a frontal boundary over extreme eastern Russia on the 18th. Torrential rains led to 150 fatalities, with damage at $10-$20 million (1979 USD).

[edit] Super Typhoon Judy

Super Typhoon Judy 4
{{{image}}} Judy 1979 track.png
Duration August 16August 26, 1979
Intensity 155 mph [1], 887 mbar[1]

A tropical disturbance organized into a tropical storm on August 15. It tracked to the northwest, becoming a tropical storm on the 17th. Judy rapidly intensified, reaching typhoon status on the 18th and a peak of 155 mph winds on the 20th. The super typhoon began to weaken as it passed south of Okinowa, and neared the Chinese coast on the 23rd and 24th. Judy turned to the northeast, and brushed past South Korea as a tropical depression on the 26th, shortly before dissipating. Judy passed through Guam and other Pacific islands, but damage was reported light there. However, the storm brought heavy rain to Korea as a tropical depression, killing 111 and more damage to an area hit by Irving just weeks before.

[edit] Tropical Storm Ken

Tropical Storm Ken TS
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Duration September 01September 04, 1979
Intensity 70 mph [1], 985 mbar[1]

[edit] Typhoon Lola

Typhoon Lola 2
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Duration September 02September 08, 1979
Intensity 105 mph [1], 950 mbar[1]

[edit] Typhoon Mac

Typhoon Mac 1
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Duration September 15September 24, 1979
Intensity 80 mph [1], 984 mbar[1]

[edit] Tropical Storm Nancy

Tropical Storm Nancy TS
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Duration September 19September 22, 1979
Intensity 50 mph [1], 993 mbar[1]

[edit] Typhoon Owen

Typhoon Owen 3
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Duration September 22October 01, 1979
Intensity 125 mph [1], 918 mbar[1]

[edit] Tropical Storm Pamela

Tropical Storm Pamela TS
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Duration September 25September 26, 1979
Intensity 50 mph [1], 1002 mbar[1]

[edit] Tropical Storm Roger

Tropical Storm Roger TS
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Duration October 03October 07, 1979
Intensity 45 mph [1], 985 mbar[1]

[edit] Typhoon Sarah

Typhoon Sarah 3
{{{image}}} Sarah 1979 track.png
Duration October 04October 15, 1979
Intensity 125 mph [1], 929 mbar[1]

The monsoon trough spawned a tropical depression in the eastern South China Sea on September 30. It drifted eastward into Luzon, and looped to the southwest where it strengthened into a tropical storm on October 4. Sarah, with weak steering currents, drifted to the south, becoming a typhoon on the 7th before hitting Palawan Island. The storm turned to the west, peaking at 130 mph winds on the 10th before the mid-level circulation became decoupled from the low-level circulation. Sarah weakened, and hit eastern Vietnam on the 14th as a 60 mph tropical storm. The storm brought heavy flooding and wind, causing massive crop damage and loss of life.

[edit] Super Typhoon Tip

Main article: Typhoon Tip
Super Typhoon Tip 5
Tip10-10-19790833ZGMSBD.gif Tip 1979 track.png
Duration October 05October 19, 1979
Intensity 190 mph [1], 870 mbar[1]

Typhoon Tip is considered to be the most intense and largest tropical cyclone ever recorded. The cyclone formed on October 5, and after moving into a very favorable environment for development, quickly strengthened into Super Typhoon Tip on the 11th. On the 12th, Super Typhoon Tip continued to intensify, with winds at 190 miles per hour and central pressure at 870 millibars, the lowest barometric pressure ever recorded from a tropical cyclone. Tip ultimately hit Japan, causing 68 deaths and moderate damage. It dissipated on October 19.

[edit] Super Typhoon Vera

Super Typhoon Vera 5
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Duration November 02November 07, 1979
Intensity 160 mph [1], 915 mbar[1]

[edit] Tropical Storm Wayne

Tropical Storm Wayne TS
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Duration November 08November 13, 1979
Intensity 60 mph [1], 990 mbar[1]

[edit] Typhoon Abby

Typhoon Abby 3
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Duration December 01December 14, 1979
Intensity 125 mph [1], 951 mbar[1]

[edit] Tropical Storm Ben

Tropical Storm Ben TS
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Duration December 21December 23, 1979
Intensity 70 mph [1], 990 mbar[1]

[edit] 1979 storm names

Western North Pacific tropical cyclones were named by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center. The first storm of 1979 was named Alice and the final one was named Ben. The name Alice was retired after this season and replaced by Andy.

  • Alice 1W
  • Bess 2W
  • Cecil 3W
  • Dot 4W
  • Ellis 6W
  • Faye 7W
  • Gordon 10W
  • Hope 9W
  • Irving 12W
  • Judy 13W
  • Ken 15W
  • Lola 16W
  • Mac 17W
  • Nancy 18W
  • Owen 19W
  • Pamela 20W
  • Roger 21W
  • Sarah 22W
  • Tip 23W
  • Vera 24W
  • Wayne 25W
  • Abby 27W
  • Ben 28W
  • Carmen
  • Dom
  • Ellen
  • Forrest
  • Georgia
  • Herbert
  • Ida
  • Joe
  • Kim
  • Lex
  • Marge
  • Norris
  • Orchid
  • Percy
  • Ruth
  • Sperry
  • Thelma
  • Vernon
  • Wynn
  • Alex
  • Betty
  • Cary
  • Dinah
  • Ed
  • Freda
  • Gerald
  • Holly
  • Ike
  • June
  • Kelly
  • Lynn
  • Maury
  • Nina
  • Ogden
  • Phyllis
  • Roy
  • Susan
  • Thad
  • Vanessa
  • Warren
  • Agnes
  • Bill
  • Clara
  • Doyle
  • Elsie
  • Fabian
  • Gay
  • Hazen
  • Irma
  • Jeff
  • Kit
  • Lee
  • Mamie
  • Nelson
  • Odessa
  • Pat
  • Ruby
  • Skip
  • Tess
  • Val
  • Winona

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at 1979 ATCR TABLE OF CONTENTS

[edit] External links