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List of notable tropical cyclones

This is a list of notable tropical cyclones, subdivided by basin and reason for notability. It does not include tropical storms which may have caused destructive inland flooding, but whose names are not retired. There are rare exceptions, like Tropical Storm Allison, which caused so much flood damage that its name was retired.

Hurricane names are retired due to the notoriety of the storm to which they are attached. See naming of tropical cyclones.

Contents

North Atlantic basin

Retired names

Hurricane names expected to be retired, but not officially retired yet; a case has been made from the National Hurricane Center and a decision will come from the WMO in April 2005:

Unnamed but historically significant

Longest-lived Atlantic tropical cyclones

Storms which have lived longer than twenty days:

  1. Puerto Rico Hurricane in August 1899 lasted 31 days.
  2. Hurricane Ginger in September 1971 lasted 27.25 days.
  3. Hurricane Inga in September 1969 lasted 24.75 days.
  4. Hurricane Kyle in October 2002 and Hurricane Ivan in September 2004 each lasted 22 days.
  5. Hurricane Carrie in September 1957 and Storm 9 in September 1893 each lasted 20.75 days.
  6. Hurricane Inez in September 1966 lasted 20.25 days.

Source: NOAA [1], [2]

Canadian hurricanes

Off-season storms

  • Hurricane Alice , 1954-formed in late December and continued until early January.
  • Tropical Storm Ana - First North Atlantic tropical system ever recorded to develop in April (2003).
  • Tropical Storm Odette - First tropical system to develop in December (2003) in 115 years.
  • Tropical Storm Peter - Second tropical system to develop in December (2003) in 115 years.

Deadliest Atlantic Hurricanes

Since 1851

  1. Hurricane Mitch - 1998 - 9,086-18,277 Deaths
  2. Galveston Hurricane - 1900 - 8,000-12,000 Deaths
  3. Hurricane Fifi - 1974 - 8,000-10,000 Deaths
  4. Dominican Republic Hurricane - 1930 - 2,000-8,000 Deaths
  5. Hurricane Flora - 1963 - 7,200 Deaths
  6. Puerto Rico Hurricane - 1899 - 3,433 Deaths
  7. Lake Okeechobee Hurricane - 1928 - 3,411 Deaths
  8. Cuba Hurricane - 1932 - 2,500-3,107 Deaths
  9. Hurricane Jeanne - 2004 - 3,037 Deaths
  10. Yucatan Hurricane - 1934 - 2,000-3,000 Deaths
  11. Belize Hurricane - 1931 - 1,500-2,500 Deaths
  12. Caribbean Hurricane - 1935 - 2,150 Deaths
  13. Hurricane David - 1979 - 2,060 Deaths
  14. Straits of Florida Hurricane - 1870 - 2,000 Deaths
  15. 'Chenier Caminada' Hurricane - 1893 - 2,000 Deaths
  16. Sea Islands Hurricane - 1893 - 1,000-2,000 Deaths
  17. Mexico Hurricane - 1909 - 1,500 Deaths
  18. Hurricane Gordon - 1994 - 1,145 Deaths
  19. Hurricane Hazel - 1954 - 600-1,200 Deaths
  20. Hurricane Inez - 1966 - 1,000 Deaths

Costliest U.S. Hurricanes

Adjusted for 2003 inflation and wealth normalization

  1. Great Miami Hurricane - 1926 - $98,051,000,000
  2. Hurricane Andrew - 1992 - $44,878,000,000
  3. Galveston Hurricane of 1900 - 1900 - $36,096,000,000
  4. Galveston Island Hurricane - 1915 - $30,585,000,000
  5. Great New England Hurricane - 1938 - $22,549,000,000
  6. Sanibel Island Hurricane - 1944 - $22,070,000,000
  7. Lake Okeechobee Hurricane - 1928 - $18,708,000,000
  8. Hurricane Ivan - 2004 - $18,000,000,000
  9. Hurricane Betsy - 1965 - $16,863,000,000
  10. Hurricane Donna - 1960 - $16,339,000,000
  11. Hurricane Charley - 2004 - $15,000,000,000
  12. Hurricane Camille - 1969 - $14,870,000,000
  13. Hurricane Agnes - 1972 - $14,515,000,000
  14. Hurricane Diane - 1955 - $13,875,000,000
  15. Hurricane Hugo - 1989 - $12,718,000,000
  16. Hurricane Carol - 1954 - $12,291,000,000
  17. Miami Hurricane of 1947 - 1947 - $11,266,000,000
  18. Hurricane Carla - 1961 - $9,587,000,000
  19. Hurricane Hazel - 1954 - $9,545,000,000
  20. Hurricane Frances - 2004 - $9,000,000,000
  21. Great Atlantic Hurricane - 1944- $8,763,000,000
  22. Southeast Florida Hurricane - 1945 - $8,561,000,000
  23. Hurricane Frederic - 1945 - $8,534,000,000
  24. Central Florida Hurricane - 1949 - $7,918,000,000
  25. South Texas Hurricane - 1919 - $7,253,000,000
  26. Hurricane Jeanne - 2004 - $7,000,000,000
  27. Hurricane Alicia - 1983 - $5,501,000,000
  28. Tropical Storm Allison - 2001 - $5,408,000,000
  29. Hurricane Floyd - 1999 - $5,264,000,000
  30. Hurricane Celia - 1970 - $4,526,000,000

[3]

Forgotten but significant hurricanes

  • The Last Island Hurricane of 1856-400 people dead. The island and the resort on it never resurfaced.
  • The Indianola Hurricane of 1886 - destroyed Indianola, Texas.
  • The New York Hurricane of 1893 -A Category 1 went straight down Broadway.
  • The Sea Islands Hurricane of 1893-Killed 2,000 people on the Georgia and South Carolina coasts.
  • The Chenier Caminada Hurricane of 1893-Killed 2,000 people in Louisiana.
  • The Puerto Rico Hurricane of 1899 -Treversed the Atlantic for 31 days.
  • The March Hurricane of 1908 -Hurricane reached Category 2 strength in March.
  • The Dominican Republic Hurricane of 1930 -Killed 8,000 people
  • The Miami Hurricane of 1947 -Stormed through Miami just weakened from a Category 5.
  • Alice , 1954-55-Formed after Christmas and continued into January.

Most Tornadoes Produced By Hurricanes

  1. Hurricane Frances (2004) - 117
  2. Hurricane Beulah (1967) - 115
  3. Hurricane Ivan (2004) - 113
  4. Hurricane Allen(1980) - 29
  5. Hurricane Gilbert (1988) - 29
  6. Hurricane Alicia(1983) - 23
  7. Hurricane Celia(1970) - 8
  8. Hurricane Carla(1961) - 8
  9. Hurricane Andrew(1992) - ?????

South Atlantic basin

Eastern Pacific basin

Retired names

Longest-lived Eastern Pacific storm

Central Pacific basin

Retired names

Western Pacific basin

Named

Unnamed

  • The Great Hong Kong Typhoon , 1937
  • The Typhoon of 1944 , 17-18 December, three US destroyers lost

Northern Indian Ocean

This region has had some of the world's deadliest cyclones, but there is a dearth of organized information about them.

South Pacific Ocean

  • Cyclone Zoe - 2002 - Reached an incredible intensity in open ocean.
  • Cyclone Erica -2003 - Devastated the South Pacific islands as a Category 5.
  • Cyclone Ivy - 2004 - Ripped through the entire length of Vanuatu and edged New Zealand.
  • Cyclone Meena - 2005 - Rounded many islands.
  • Cyclone Nancy - 2005 - Added a second punch to American Samoa.
  • Cyclone Olaf - 2005 - Followed a similar step with legendary strength.
  • Cyclone Percy - 2005 - Blasted the already devastated South Pacific.

Australian tropical cyclones

See History - Australia's worst cyclone disasters (from Queensland Government State Disaster Management Group).

  • Cyclone Mahina, 1899 - over 300 people died.
  • Tropical Cyclone Ada , 1970 - 14 people died and costed approximately 390 million AUD.
  • Cyclone Tracy, 1974 - 65 people died
  • Tropical Cyclone Winifred , 1986 - 3 people died
  • Tropical Cyclone Justin , 1997 - 7 people died and costed approximately 190 million AUD.
  • Cyclone Ingrid, 2005

Most intense storms on record

  1. Typhoon Tip - 870 mb, Western Pacific, 1979
  2. Typhoon Zeb - 872 mb, Western Pacific, 1998
  3. Typhoon Gay - 872 mb, Western Pacific, 1992
  4. Typhoon Keith - 872 mb, Western Pacific, 1997
  5. Typhoon Joan - 872 mb, Western Pacific, 1997
  6. Typhoon Ivan - 872 mb, Western Pacific, 1997
  7. Typhoon Forrest - 876 mb, Western Pacific, 1983
  8. Typhoon Chaba - 879 mb, Western Pacific, 2004
  9. Typhoon Yuri - 885 mb, Western Pacific, 1991
  10. Hurricane Gilbert - 888 mb, Atlantic, 1988
  11. Typhoon Nancy - 888 mb, Western Pacific, 1961
  12. Labor Day Hurricane - 892 mb, Atlantic, 1935
  13. Hurricane Allen - 899 mb, Atlantic, 1980
  14. Hurricane Linda - 900 mb, Eastern Pacific, 1997
  15. Hurricane Camille - 905 mb, Atlantic Ocean, 1969
  16. Hurricane Mitch - 905 mb, Atlantic Ocean, 1998
  17. Hurricane Ivan - 910 mb, Atlantic Ocean, 2004
  18. Hurricane Kenna - 913 mb, Eastern Pacific, 2002
  19. Hurricane Janet - 914 mb, Atlantic Ocean, 1955
  20. Hurricane Ava - 915 mb, Eastern Pacific, 1973

Note: Several Western Pacific storms that have achieved pressure readings of between 880 and 915mb and are not included because they are so common in that part of the world or so unknown. Also pressure readings from the Indian Ocean are not available.

Size extremes

  • Typhoon Tip is the largest tropical cyclone on record at 1350 miles (2170 km) wide, October (1979)
  • Cyclone Tracy is the smallest tropical cyclone on record at 30 miles (48 km) wide, December (1974)


Notes

See also

Last updated: 10-21-2005 07:40:59
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