Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Typhoon Maemi (pronounced) or (pronounced), known in the Philippines as Typhoon Pogi, [1] was the most powerful typhoon to strike South Korea since record-keeping began in the country in 1904. Maemi formed on 4 September 2003, from a disturbance in a monsoon trough in the western Pacific Ocean .
CAMS (the Cameras for All-Sky Meteor Surveillance project) is a NASA-sponsored international project that tracks and triangulates meteors during night-time video surveillance in order to map and monitor meteor showers. Data processing is housed at the Carl Sagan Center of the SETI Institute [1] in California, USA.
Typhoon Maemi nearing South Korea on September 12, 2003. September 13–16, 2000 ― Typhoon Saomai brought heavy rainfall and strong winds that caused power outages to 422,000 homes. July 6–8, 2002 ― Tropical Storm Rammasun passes a short distance to the west of Jeju Island before making landfall near the Seoul Metropolitan Area. The storm ...
Watch a live view of Taitung City as Typhoon Doksuri brings heavy rainfall to southern Taiwan, as it passes through the sea channel. Businesses and schools were shut on Thursday (27 July) while ...
Typhoon Gaemi, known in the Philippines as Super Typhoon Carina, was a powerful and destructive tropical cyclone which impacted East China, Taiwan, and the Philippines in late July 2024. Gaemi, which means ant in Korean, the third named storm and second typhoon of the annual typhoon season , formed as a tropical depression east of Palau on July 19.
A devastating typhoon that tore through the Philippines, Taiwan and China last month, destroying infrastructure and leaving more than 100 people dead, was made significantly worse by human-induced ...
Also brought to you by Coco’s On The Beach, those interested in viewing the storm coverage live from their homes can watch live webcam footage of the beach on Surfline that shows the surf, wave ...
June 9–10, 2004: Tropical Storm Chanthu (Gener) crosses Visayas which also brought tremendous amount of rainfall. June 29–30, 2004: Typhoon Mindulle (Igme) batters the extreme northern portion of Luzon, which led to the deaths of 56 people. July 14, 2004: Tropical Storm Kompasu (Julian) traverses the Babuyan Group of Islands with light ...