Tropical cyclones in 2007

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Tropical cyclones in 2007
Tropical cyclones in 2007.png
Year summary map
Year boundaries
First systemTD
FormedJanuary 5, 2007
Last systemHelen
DissipatedJanuary 6, 2008
Strongest system
NameGeorge[nb 1]
Lowest pressure902 mbar/hPa; 26.64 inHg
Longest lasting system
NameDora
Duration13 days
Year statistics
Total systems130
Named systems79
Total fatalities17,551 total
Total damage$21.44 billion (2007 USD)
Related articles
Other years
2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009
Typhoons Mitag and Hagibis flanking the Philippines on 25 November, 07:00 UTC.

During 2007, tropical cyclones formed within seven different tropical cyclone basins, located within various parts of the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans. During the year, a total of 129 systems formed with 79 of these developing further and were named by the responsible warning centre. The strongest tropical cyclone of the year was Cyclone George, which was estimated to have a minimum barometric pressure of 902 hPa (26.64 inHg).

The most active basin in the year was the Western Pacific, which documented 24 named systems. The North Atlantic had an above-average season with 15 named storms. The Eastern Pacific hurricane season experienced a below-average number of tropical storm intensity systems, numbering 11. Activity across the Southern Hemisphere's three basins – South-West Indian, Australian, and South Pacific – was fairly significant, with the regions recording 25 named storms altogether, with the most intense Southern Hemisphere cyclone of the year,

The deadliest tropical cyclone of the year was Cyclone Sidr in the North Indian Ocean which killed 15,000 people in Bangladesh and the costliest tropical cyclone of the year was Cyclone Gonu in the North Indian Ocean, which caused more than $4.41 billion in damage after striking Oman, United Arab Emirates, Iran and Pakistan.

Global atmospheric and hydrological conditions[]

The ENSO during this year is mostly neutral, unlike the previous season.

Summary[]

Cyclone Helen (2008)Tropical Storm Olga (2007)Severe Tropical Cyclone DamanTyphoon Mitag (2007)Cyclone GubaCyclone SidrHurricane Noel (2007)Tropical Storm Faxai (2007)Tropical Storm Kiko (2007)Hurricane Lorenzo (2007)Tropical Depression Ten (2007)Typhoon Wipha (2007)Hurricane Humberto (2007)Typhoon Nari (2007)Tropical Storm Gabrielle (2007)Hurricane Felix (2007)Hurricane Henriette (2007)Typhoon Fitow (2007)Tropical Storm Erin (2007)Hurricane Dean (2007)Typhoon SepatHurricane Flossie (2007)Typhoon Pabuk (2007)Tropical Storm Chantal (2007)Tropical Storm Dalila (2007)Hurricane Cosme (2007)Tropical Storm Toraji (2007)Cyclone YemyinCyclone GonuTropical Storm Barry (2007)Tropical Storm Barbara (2007)Cyclone AkashSubtropical Storm Andrea (2007)Cyclone CliffTyphoon Kong-rey (2007)Cyclone IndlalaCyclone GeorgeCyclone GamedeCyclone FavioCyclone Arthur (2007)tropical cyclone basins

North Atlantic Ocean[]

The activity was a slightly above-average Atlantic hurricane season, featuring many weak and short-lived storms. 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. The first system, Subtropical Storm Andrea, developed on May 9, while the last storm, Tropical Storm Olga, dissipated on December 13. The most intense hurricane, Dean, is tied for the eighth-most-intense Atlantic hurricane ever recorded as well as the third most intense Atlantic hurricane at landfall. The season was one of only seven on record for the Atlantic with more than one Category 5 hurricane. It was the second on record in which an Atlantic hurricane, Felix, and an eastern Pacific hurricane, Henriette, made landfall on the same day. September had a record-tying eight storms, although the strengths and durations of most of the storms were low. Aside from hurricanes Dean and Felix, none of the storms in the season exceeded Category 1 intensity.

Several storms made landfall or directly affected land. Hurricanes Dean and Felix made landfall at Category 5 intensity, causing severe damage in parts of Mexico and Central America, respectively. Both storm names, as well as Noel, the name of a hurricane that affected the Caribbean, were retired from the naming list of Atlantic hurricanes. The United States was affected by five cyclones, although the storms were generally weak; three tropical depressions and only two tropical storms, Barry and Gabrielle, and one hurricane, Humberto, made landfall in the country. Elsewhere, three storms directly affected Canada, although none severely. The combined storms killed at least 478 people and caused about $3.42 billion (2007 USD, $4.27 billion 2021 USD) in damage.[nb 2]

Eastern Pacific Ocean[]

The activity was a below-average Pacific hurricane season, featuring one major hurricane. The first tropical cyclone of the season, Alvin, developed on May 27, while the final system of the year, Kiko, dissipated on October 23. Due to unusually strong wind shear, activity fell short of the long-term average, with a total of 11 named storms, 4 hurricanes, and 1 major hurricane. At the time, 2007 featured the second-lowest value of the Accumulated cyclone energy (ACE) index since reliable records began in 1971. Two tropical cyclones – Cosme and Flossie – crossed into the central Pacific basin during the year, activity below the average of 4 to 5 systems. Impact during the season was relatively minimal. In early June, Tropical Storm Barbara moved ashore just northwest of the Mexico–Guatemala border, causing $55 million (2007 USD)[nb 3] in damage and 4 deaths. In late July, Cosme passed south of the island of Hawaii as a weakening tropical depression; light rain and increased surf resulted. A few days later, Dalila passed offshore the coastline of southwestern Mexico, killing 11 and causing minimal damage. Hurricane Flossie followed a similar track to Cosme in mid-August, producing gusty winds and light precipitation in Hawaii. Hurricane Henriette in early September produced torrential rainfall in southwestern Mexico, killing 6 and causing $25 million in damage. Baja California received moderate rains from Hurricane Ivo in mid-September, though no damage nor fatalities were reported. In mid-October, Tropical Storm Kiko passed just offshore the coastline of southwestern Mexico. Though no deaths were reported on the Mexico mainland, the storm capsized a ship with 30 people on board, 15 of whom were recovered dead, and 9 of whom were reported missing. Overall, the season ended with $80 million in damage and 49 deaths.

North Indian Ocean[]

The activity was an active year for this basin; it was the most destructive season in known history at this time, only for the 2008 season to surpass it the next year. 2007 was also the first season to have multiple Category 5 cyclones (by the Saffir–Simpson scale), and the two Category 5's, Sidr and Gonu, were also the first named Category 5 cyclones to form in their respective seas; Gonu in the Arabian Sea, and Sidr in the Bay of Bengal. Other notable storms of the season include Akash and Yemyin, both of which caused substantial damage and deaths. At least 4,545 deaths were reported, and damage was about 6.4 billion dollars.

Systems[]

January[]

Cyclone Dora
Tropical cyclones formed in January 2007
Storm name Dates active Max wind
km/h (mph)
Pressure
(hPa)
Areas affected Damage
(USD)
Deaths Refs
TD January 5 Unspecified 1006 None None None
06 January 5–8 45 (30) 999 None None None
06F January 9–17 55 (35) 1000 None None None
Zita January 18–25 100 (65) 975 French Polynesia None None
Arthur January 21–27 100 (65) 975 Samoan Islands, Cook Islands, French Polynesia None None
Dora January 26 – February 8 195 (120) 925 Rodrigues None None

February[]

Tropical cyclones formed in February 2007
Storm name Dates active Max wind
km/h (mph)
Pressure
(hPa)
Areas affected Damage
(USD)
Deaths Refs
09F February 1 – 5 Unspecified 997 Fiji None None
Nelson February 5 – 7 95 (60) 985 Southern Gulf of Carpentaria Minimal None
TL February 5 – 8 85 (50) 995 None None None
Enok February 6 – 13 110 (70) 978 None None None
Favio February 11 – 23 195 (120) 925 Mozambique, Madagascar $71 million 10 [1]
Gamede February 20 – March 2 165 (105) 935 Mascarene Islands $120 million 4 [2][3][4]
Humba February 20 – 26 140 (85) 960 None None None

March[]

Tropical cyclones formed in March 2007
Storm name Dates active Max wind
km/h (mph)
Pressure
(hPa)
Areas affected Damage
(USD)
Deaths Refs
Odette March 2–5 75 (45) 990 None None None
George March 3–10 205 (125) 902 Northern Territory, Western Australia $15.7 million 5
Jacob March 3–12 130 (80) 958 Western Australia None None
TD March 6–7 Unspecified 1002 None None None
Indlala March 9–18 175 (110) 935 St. Brandon, Agaléga, Madagascar $240 million 150
13 March 13–17 45 (30) 1002 None None None
12F March 21–25 55 (35) 998 None None None
Kara March 23–30 155 (100) 948 None None None
Becky March 25–29 110 (70) 975 Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, New Caledonia None None
Jaya March 26 – April 8 185 (115) 935 Madagascar Minimal 1
Kong-rey March 30 – April 6 150 (90) 960 Mariana Islands $10 thousand None

April[]

Two tropical cyclones were formed and one was named in the month of April, becoming the least active in modern history. Cyclone Cliff caused widespread damage in Fiji and Tonga killing four people.

Tropical cyclones formed in April 2007
Storm name Dates active Max wind
km/h (mph)
Pressure
(hPa)
Areas affected Damage
(USD)
Deaths Refs
Cliff April 1 – 6 100 (65) 980 Fiji, Tonga $4.0 million 4
15 April 9 – 12 95 (60) 994 None None None

May[]

Typhoon Yutu
Tropical cyclones formed in May 2007
Storm name Dates active Max wind
km/h (mph)
Pressure
(hPa)
Areas affected Damage
(USD)
Deaths Refs
BOB 01 May 1 – 5 45 (30) 998 Thailand, Myanmar $500,000 None
Andrea May 9 – 11 95 (60) 1001 Virginia, Southeastern U.S., Bahamas Minimal 6
Akash May 12 – 15 85 (50) 982 Andaman Islands, Nicobar Islands, Bangladesh, Burma $982 million 14
Pierre May 15 – 21 75 (45) 990 Papua New Guinea Minimal None
Yutu (Amang) May 17 – 23 175 (110) 935 None None None
Alvin May 27 – 31 65 (40) 1003 None None None
Barbara May 29 – June 2 85 (50) 1000 Southwestern Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador $55 million 4

June[]

Tropical cyclones formed in June 2007
Storm name Dates active Max wind
km/h (mph)
Pressure
(hPa)
Areas affected Damage
(USD)
Deaths Refs
Barry June 1–2 95 (60) 997 El Salvador, Cuba, Florida, East Coast of the United States $118 thousand 3
Gonu June 1–7 240 (150) 920 Oman, United Arab Emirates, Iran, Pakistan $4.4 billion 78
Three-E June 11–12 55 (35) 1004 None None None
Yemyin June 21–26 65 (40) 986 India, Pakistan, Afghanistan $2.1 billion 983
BOB 04 June 28–30 55 (35) 989 India Unknown 57
TD June 29 Unspecified 1006 Caroline Islands None None

July[]

Tropical cyclones formed in July 2007
Storm name Dates active Max wind
km/h (mph)
Pressure
(hPa)
Areas affected Damage
(USD)
Deaths Refs
TD July 2 Unspecified 1006 Caroline Islands None None
Toraji July 4–5 65 (40) 994 China, Vietnam $9.7 million None
BOB 05 July 4–9 55 (35) 988 Bangladesh Unknown 16
Four-E July 9–11 55 (35) 1006 None None None
Man-yi (Bebeng) July 9–16 175 (110) 935 Japan, Aleutian Islands $105 thousand 16
Five-E July 14–15 55 (35) 1006 None None None
Cosme July 14–22 120 (75) 987 Hawaii None None
Dalila July 22–27 95 (60) 995 Baja California Sur, Jalisco, Socorro Island Minimal 11
01U July 26–29 75 (45) 992 None None None
Usagi July 27 – August 4 165 (105) 945 Japan, Korean Peninsula, Russia $225 million None
Erick July 31 – August 2 65 (40) 1004 None None None
Chantal July 31 – August 2 85 (50) 994 Bermuda, Atlantic Canada, Newfoundland $24.3 million None

August[]

Tropical cyclones formed in August 2007
Storm name Dates active Max wind
km/h (mph)
Pressure
(hPa)
Areas affected Damage
(USD)
Deaths Refs
06W August 2–8 55 (35) 994 China, Vietnam $2.05 billion 77
Pabuk (Chedeng) August 4–14 120 (75) 975 Philippines, Taiwan, China, Korean Peninsula $227 million 15
BOB 06 August 5–7 55 (35) 984 India Unknown 24
Wutip (Dodong) August 7–8 65 (40) 990 Philippines, Taiwan Unknown 3
Flossie August 8–16 220 (140) 949 Hawaii Minimal None
TD August 10–12 Not specified 992 East China None None
TD August 11–12 Not specified 1006 None None None
Sepat (Egay) August 12–24 205 (125) 910 Philippines, Taiwan, China, $693 million 46
Dean August 13–23 280 (175) 905 Lesser Antilles, Puerto Rico, Hispaniola, Jamaica, Cuba, Cayman Islands, Central America, Mexico $1.6 billion 45
TD August 14–15 Not specified 1002 East China, Ryukyu Islands None None
TD August 14–17 Not specified 996 South China None None
Erin August 15–17 65 (40) 1003 Texas, Oklahoma, Central United States $248 million 21
TD August 21–22 Not specified 1006 None None None
TD August 25–30 Not specified 1002 Taiwan, East China, Korea, Japan None None
Fitow August 27–September 7 130 (80) 975 Japan, Russia $1 billion 3
Gil August 29–September 2 75 (45) 1001 Mexico Minimal 1
Henriette August 30–September 6 140 (85) 972 Mexico, Baja California Peninsula $25 million 11
Felix August 31–September 5 280 (175) 929 Trinidad and Tobago, Windward Islands, Venezuela, Leeward Islands, Colombia, Central America, Mexico $720 million 133
TD August 31 Not specified 1016 None None None

September[]

Tropical cyclones formed in September 2007
Storm name Dates active Max wind
km/h (mph)
Pressure
(hPa)
Areas affected Damage
(USD)
Deaths Refs
Danas September 6–11 100 (65) 990 None None None
Gabrielle September 8–11 95 (60) 1004 East Coast of the United States Minimal 1
TD September 9–14 Not specified 1000 Ryukyu Islands, East China None None
Nari (Falcon) September 11–17 185 (115) 935 Japan, South Korea $393 million 23
Ingrid September 12–17 75 (45) 1002 None None None
Humberto September 12–14 150 (90) 985 Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Carolinas $50 million 1
Wipha (Goring) September 15–20 185 (115) 925 Taiwan, China $1.3 billion 20
Ivo September 18–23 130 (80) 984 Baja California Peninsula None None
Thirteen-E September 19–20 55 (35) 1007 None None None
14W September 19–21 55 (35) 1004 None None None
Ten September 21–22 55 (35) 1005 Florida, Georgia, Alabama $6.2 million None
Francisco September 21–26 75 (45) 990 China, Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia Unknown Unknown
BOB 07 September 21–24 45 (30) 990 India Unknown 75
Jerry September 23–24 65 (40) 1003 None None None
TD September 24–25 Not specified 1006 None None None
Karen September 25–29 120 (75) 988 None None None
Lorenzo September 25–28 130 (80) 990 Mexico $92 million 6
TD September 27–28 Not specified 1002 None None None
Lekima (Hanna) September 28 – October 4 110 (70) 975 Philippines, Vietnam $125 million 110
Melissa September 28–30 65 (40) 1005 None None None
Juliette September 29 – October 2 95 (60) 997 None None None
Hayian September 30 – October 7 75 (45) 994 None None None

October[]

Tropical cyclones formed in October 2007
Storm name Dates active Max wind
km/h (mph)
Pressure
(hPa)
Areas affected Damage
(USD)
Deaths Refs
Krosa (Ineng) October 1–8 195 (120) 925 Taiwan, China $1.7 billion 5 [5]
Podul October 6–7 100 (65) 985 None None None
Lingling October 10–15 80 (50) 994 None None None
Fifteen October 11–12 55 (35) 1011 None None None
01 October 12–13 45 (30) 1005 None None None
Kiko October 15–23 110 (70) 991 Western Mexico None 15 [6]
01F October 17–19 Unspecified 1000 Solomon Islands None None
Kajiki October 18–22 165 (105) 945 None None None
Faxai (Juaning) October 25–29 100 (65) 975 Japan 1 $1.5 million [7][8]
BOB 08 October 27–29 45 (30) 1004 India Unknown 34 [9][10][11]
ARB 02 October 27–November 2 55 (35) 1000 Somalia None None
Noel October 28–November 2 140 (80) 980 Leeward Islands, Puerto Rico, Hispaniola, Jamaica, Cuba, Turks and Caicos Islands, Bahamas, Florida, East Coast of the United States, Atlantic Canada, Greenland $580 million 222
TD October 29–30 Unspecified 1004 None None None

November[]

Tropical cyclones formed in November 2007
Storm name Dates active Max wind
km/h (mph)
Pressure
(hPa)
Areas affected Damage
(USD)
Deaths Refs
Peipah (Kabayan) November 1–10 130 (80) 970 Philippines, Vietnam Unknown 50
TD November 2–3 Unspecified 1006 Vietnam None None
Tapah November 11–13 65 (40) 996 None None None
Sidr November 11–16 215 (130) 944 Andaman Islands, Bangladesh, West Bengal, Northeast India $2.31 billion ~15,000 [12][13][14]
Cyclone Lee-Ariel/Tropical Storm Ariel November 11–28 95 (60) 984 None None None
Guba November 13–20 140 (95) 970 Papua New Guinea, Queensland $71.4 million 149 [15][16]
Bongwe November 17–28 105 (65) 976 None None None
Hagibis (Lando) November 18–27 130 (80) 970 Philippines, Vietnam $5.3 million 22 [17]
Mitag (Mina) November 20–27 150 (90) 955 Philippines, Malaysia, Taiwan and Okinawa $19.79 million 67 [18][19][20][21]
02F November 20–22 Unspecified 1001 Fiji None None
03F November 22–December 2 Unspecified 999 Vanuatu, Fiji, Wallis and Futuna, Samoan Islands, Cook Islands None None
25W November 2–3 Unspecified 1004 None None None
26W November 2–3 Unspecified 996 None None None

December[]

Tropical cyclones formed in November 2007
Storm name Dates active Max wind
km/h (mph)
Pressure
(hPa)
Areas affected Damage
(USD)
Deaths Refs
Daman December 3–10 185 (115) 925 Fiji $330 thousand None
Olga December 11–13 95 (60) 1003 Puerto Rico, Hispaniola, Yucatán Peninsula, Florida $45 million 40 [22][23][24][25]
Celina December 11–23 75 (45) 992 Madagascar Minimal None
05F December 11–14 55 (35) 1000 Vanuatu, New Caledonia Unknown Unknown
Dama December 17–22 65 (40) 995 None None None
06F December 26–28 35 (25) 1006 New Caledonia Unknown Unknown
Melanie December 28–January 2 110 (70) 964 None None None
Helen December 28–January 6 95 (60) 974 Far North Queensland, Northern Territory, Western Australia $1.1 million 1 [26]
Elnus December 29–January 3 65 (40) 995 Madagascar None None
07U December 31–January 2 55 (35) 994 None None None

Global effects[]

Season name Areas affected Systems formed Named storms Damage (USD) Deaths
2007 Atlantic hurricane season Guyana, Venezuela, Trinidad and Tobago, Windward Islands, Honduras, Belize, Cayman Islands, Mexico, Cuba, United States, Barbados, Nicaragua, Bermuda, Suriname, Jamaica, Atlantic Canada, Cape Verde, Leeward Islands, Puerto Rico, Hispaniola, Turks and Caicos, The Bahamas, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Panama 17 15 $3.42 billion 478
2007 Pacific hurricane season Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Honduras, Southwestern Mexico, Western Mexico, Hawaii, Baja California Peninsula 15 11 $80 million 42
2007 Pacific typhoon season 3 Caroline Islands, Philippines, Mariana Islands, Ryukyu Islands, Taiwan, China, Vietnam, Laos, Russian Far East, Alaska, Thailand, Cambodia, South Korea, North Korea 45 24 $7.73 billion 463
2007 North Indian Ocean cyclone season Thailand, Myanmar, Oman, Iran, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, East India, Central India, South India, Gujarat, Sri Lanka, Thailand Thailand, Myanmar, Oman, Iran, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, East India, Central India, South India, Gujarat, Sri Lanka, Thailand 4 $9.692 million 16,248
2006–07 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season 2 Madagascar, Mauritius, Rodrigues, Tromelin Island, Réunion 10 7 $431 million 165
2007–08 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season 3 Madagascar, Mauritius, Rodrigues, Réunion 7 5 Minimal 1
2006–07 Australian region cyclone season 2 Western Australia, Eastern Indonesia, Top End, Kimberley, Queensland, Papua New Guinea, Cocos (Keeling) Islands 8 7 $15.7 million 5
2007–08 Australian region cyclone season 3 Papua New Guinea, Queensland 2 1 $71.4 million 149
2006–07 South Pacific cyclone season 2 Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Tuvalu, Fiji, Samoa, Tonga, Niue, Tokelau, American Samoa 10 4 None None
2007–08 South Pacific cyclone season 3 Solomon Islands, Fiji, Tonga 6 1 None None
Worldwide (See above) 130[a] 79 $21,440.1 billion 17,551
  1. ^ The sum of the number of systems and fatalities in each basin will not equal the number shown as the total. This is because when systems move between basins, it creates a discrepancy in the actual number of systems and fatalities.

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ The "strength" of a tropical cyclone is measured by the minimum barometric pressure, not wind speed. Most meteorological organizations rate the intensity of a storm by this figure, so the lower the minimum pressure of the storm, the more intense or "stronger" it is considered to be. The strongest winds were actually from Dean, at 175 mph (280 km/h).
  2. ^ The cumulative damage figures were obtained by summing the damage figures on the individual Tropical Cyclone Reports referenced throughout the article, with the exception of Hurricane Dean. Dean's damage figures were obtained by adding the per-country totals referenced in the Impact section of this article.
  3. ^ All damage totals are in 2007 USD unless otherwise stated.

1 Only systems that formed either on or after January 1, 2007 are counted in the seasonal totals.
2 Only systems that formed either before or on December 31, 2007 are counted in the seasonal totals.
3 The wind speeds for this tropical cyclone/basin are based on the IMD Scale which uses 3-minute sustained winds.
4 The wind speeds for this tropical cyclone/basin are based on the Saffir Simpson Scale which uses 1-minute sustained winds.
5The wind speeds for this tropical cyclone are based on Météo-France which uses gust winds.

References[]

  1. ^ "Mozambique: Floods and Cyclone Fact Sheet #1 (FY) 2007". Relief Web. March 22, 2007. Retrieved April 13, 2013.
  2. ^ "Africa Weekly Spotlight" (PDF). International Strategy for Disaster Reduction. 2007-03-05. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-05-26. Retrieved 2008-01-28.
  3. ^ Sapa (2007-02-25). "Cyclone Gamede sweeps over Indian Ocean islands". Agence France-Presse. Archived from the original on 2012-05-23. Retrieved 2008-04-12.
  4. ^ "L'évaluation préliminaire des risques d'inondation" (PDF) (in French). Réunion Regional Directorate for the Environment, Planning and Housing. 2011. Retrieved April 5, 2020.
  5. ^ "Typhoon hits China, then weakens to storm". Reuters. October 7, 2007.
  6. ^ Staff Writer (2007-10-21). "Fifteen dead, 9 missing as boat sinks". Agence France-Presse. Retrieved 2008-07-27.[dead link]
  7. ^ "Tropical Storm Faxai Drenches Parts of Japan". Earth Environment Service. November 2, 2007. Archived from the original on February 14, 2012. Retrieved March 2, 2009.
  8. ^ Japan Meteorological Agency (2008). "41st Session Country Report: Japan" (PDF). World Meteorological Organization. Archived (PDF) from the original on February 20, 2012. Retrieved March 2, 2009.
  9. ^ "15 killed in rain-hit TN; schools, colleges shut". CNN-IBN. 2007-10-29. Archived from the original on 2009-05-28. Retrieved 2008-10-26.
  10. ^ TIMESNOW.tv – Latest Breaking News, Big News Stories, News Videos
  11. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on May 12, 2013. Retrieved December 15, 2013.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  12. ^ Ali Asif Shawson (May 20, 2020). "Cyclone Amphan: Bangladesh may face losses worth Tk12,744cr". Dhaka Tribune. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  13. ^ Peter Foster (18 November 2007). "Bangladesh cyclone death toll hits 15,000". The Telegraph. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  14. ^ "Bangladesh: Cyclone Sidr Has Killed Up To 15,000". WBRC. Fox Television Stations Inc. November 18, 2007. Archived from the original on November 26, 2007. Retrieved November 18, 2007.
  15. ^ "Papua New Guinea: Cyclone Guba Final Report" (PDF). International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies. 29 May 2009. Retrieved 30 August 2010.
  16. ^ "At least 71 dead in PNG floods say officials[permanent dead link]", Agence France-Presse, 19 November 2007. Retrieved on 19 November 2007.
  17. ^ 'Lando' floods, landslides kill 9, injure 5 – NDCC GMANews.tv
  18. ^ "Typhoon Mitag death toll rises to 22 in Philippines". People's Daily Online. Xinhua. November 28, 2007. Retrieved August 3, 2009.
  19. ^ National Disaster Coordinating Council (November 30, 2007). "Sitrep No. 14 re Typhoon "Mina" (Mitag)" (PDF). ReliefWeb. Retrieved August 4, 2009.
  20. ^ "Official death toll from Philippines typhoon rises to 12". Channel News Asia. Associated Press. November 27, 2007. Retrieved August 3, 2009.
  21. ^ DPA (November 29, 2007). "Taiwan continues search for 26 missing Indonesian cargo ship crew". Earth News. Retrieved August 3, 2009.
  22. ^ Ramon Almanzar (2007-12-12). "Tropical Storm Olga forces evacuations in Dominican Republic; one killed in Puerto Rico". Associated Press. Archived from the original on December 22, 2007. Retrieved 2007-12-13.
  23. ^ Staff Writer (2007-12-15). "40 dead in Caribbean tropical storm". News.com.au. Agence France-Presse.
  24. ^ "Dominican officials say Tropical Storm Olga causes major crop losses". Associated Press. 2007-12-15.
  25. ^ "Dominican president orders probe into opening of dam during Tropical Storm Olga". Associated Press. 2007-12-18. Retrieved 2007-12-20.
  26. ^ "Tropical Cyclone Helen Tropical Cyclone Report" (PDF). Darwin Tropical Cyclone Warning Centre. Australian Bureau of Meteorology. 2008. p. 3. Retrieved 20 January 2011.

External links[]

Regional Specialized Meteorological Centers

Tropical Cyclone Warning Centers

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Weather Service.

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