Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 2010–11 Australian region cyclone season was a near average tropical cyclone season, with eleven tropical cyclones forming compared to an average of 12. The season was also the costliest recorded in the Australian region basin, with a total of $3.62 billion (2011 USD) in damages, mostly from the destructive Cyclone Yasi. [1]
The 2011–12 Australian region cyclone season was a below average tropical cyclone season, with 7 cyclones forming rather than the usual 11. It began on 1 November 2011, and ended on 14 May 2012. It began on 1 November 2011, and ended on 14 May 2012.
2 Only systems that formed either on or after January 1, 2011 are counted in the seasonal totals. 3 Only systems that formed either before or on December 31, 2011 are counted in the seasonal totals. 4 The wind speeds for this tropical cyclone/basin are based on the IMD Scale which uses 3-minute sustained winds.
Ahead of the 2003 Pacific hurricane season, the NOAA forecasters decided to start issuing an experimental tropical cyclone outlook for the Eastern Pacific, which was designed not to be updated during the mid-season. [5] As a result of both the 2003 and 2004 outlooks being successful, the predictions became an operational product during 2005. [6]
The first dynamical hurricane track forecast model, the Sanders Barotropic Tropical Cyclone Track Prediction Model (SANBAR), [9] was introduced in 1970 and was used by the National Hurricane Center as part of its operational track guidance through 1989. It was based on a simplified set of atmospheric dynamical equations (the equivalent ...
The Atlantic hurricane season officially began on June 1, 2011. [21] It was an above average season in which twenty tropical cyclones formed. Nineteen of the twenty depressions attained tropical storm status, tied with 1887 , 1995 , 2010 , and later the 2012 season for the fourth-highest number of named storms since record-keeping began in 1851.
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Season TL TC STC Strongest storm Deaths Damage Retired names Notes 2020–21: 27: 8: 3 5 Niran: 272: $518.7 million 3 Seroja: Second-deadliest Australian region cyclone season on record. 2021–22: 32: 10: 2 4 Vernon: 4: $75 million 2 Seth: 2022–23: 25: 7: 5 5 Darian 5 Ilsa: 8: $2.7 million 5 Freddy 3 Gabrielle 5 Ilsa 2023–24: 11: 8: 6 5 ...