Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Deep Depression BOB 03 and Cyclonic Storm Yemyin (JTWC designation: 03B) were a pair of deadly tropical cyclones that made landfalls on India and Pakistan in June 2007. The Pakistan Meteorological Department referred to both as Tropical Cyclone 03B, naming it "Tropical Cyclone Yemyin".
1200 UTC — Depression BOB 03/2007 is upgraded to Deep Depression BOB 03/2007. [16] 1300 UTC — The PMD upgrades Deep Depression BOB 03/2007 to a severe cyclonic storm, naming it "Yemyin". However, the IMD does not follow suit at this time, leaving this storm operationally unnamed. It would be retroactively named Yemyin in post-analysis. [17 ...
The cyclone caused about $4.2 billion in damage (2007 USD) and 50 deaths in Oman, where the cyclone was considered the nation's worst natural disaster. Gonu dropped heavy rainfall near the eastern coastline, reaching up to 610 mm (24 in) which caused flooding and heavy damage.
Despite the high activity of weak storms during 2007, it was the first season to feature more than one Category 5 landfalling hurricane, a feat that would not be matched until ten years later. It produced 17 tropical cyclones , 15 tropical storms, six hurricanes, and two major hurricanes.
Cyclone Yemyin making landfall in Balochistan province on 26 June 2007. Cyclones mostly hit the Sindh coast than the Balochistan coast in Pakistan. During the last 125 years a number of cyclonic storms have struck Pakistan's coastal areas. The years involved were 1895, 1902, 1907, 1944, 1948, 1964, 1985, 1999, 2007 and 2010.
Timeline of the 2007–08 Australian region cyclone season; 2007 Pacific hurricane season; 2007 North Indian Ocean cyclone season; ... Cyclones BOB 03 and Yemyin
The November 1932 Cuba hurricane and Hurricane Irma in 2007 spent the longest combined time at Category 5 strength at 78 and 77 ... The cyclone was initially measured as a Category 4 storm, ...
The smallest tropical cyclone was Cyclone Ogni, which struck the Andhra Pradesh coast on October 30, 2008. The cyclone's diameter was only 100 km (62 mi). [36] The largest tropical cyclone was the 1999 Odisha Cyclone, which strike the coast of Odisha. [8] [37] The wettest tropical cyclone was Severe Cyclonic Storm ARB 01 (2004). One of the ...