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1954 Pacific typhoon season

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The 1954 Pacific typhoon season has no official bounds; it ran year-round in 1954, but most tropical cyclones tend to form in the northwestern Pacific Ocean between June and December. These dates conventionally delimit the period of each year when most tropical cyclones form in the northwestern Pacific Ocean.

The scope of this article is limited to the Pacific Ocean, north of the equator and west of the international date line. Storms that form east of the date line and north of the equator are called hurricanes; see 1954 Pacific hurricane season. Tropical Storms formed in the entire west Pacific basin were assigned a name by the Fleet Weather Center on Guam.

Pacific Typhoon Seasons
1952 1953 1954 1955 1956

Storms

Typhoon Elsie

 
DurationUnknown – Unknown
Peak intensityWinds not specified;

Typhoon Flossie

 
DurationUnknown – Unknown
Peak intensityWinds not specified;

Typhoon Grace

 
DurationUnknown – Unknown
Peak intensityWinds not specified;

Typhoon Grace struck the Southern Japanese islands of Kyūshū and Shikoku. 28 people were killed and 33 were missing.

Typhoon Helen

 
DurationUnknown – Unknown
Peak intensityWinds not specified;

Super Typhoon Ida

 
DurationUnknown – Unknown
Peak intensityWinds not specified;

Super Typhoon June

 
DurationUnknown – Unknown
Peak intensityWinds not specified;

Typhoon June struck the Southern Japanese hitting the area west of Kanto especially hard. 107 people were killed and 39 were missing.

Typhoon Kathy

 
DurationUnknown – Unknown
Peak intensityWinds not specified;

Typhoon Lorna

 
DurationUnknown – Unknown
Peak intensityWinds not specified;

Typhoon Lorna brushed the southern coast of the Japanese island of Shikoku. 34 people were killed and 20 were missing.

Typhoon Marie

 
DurationUnknown – Unknown
Peak intensityWinds not specified;

Typhoon Marie had a minimum pressure of 956 mb and a maximum windspeeds of 85 mph. Marie crossed the southern islands of Kyūshū and Shikoku before turning northeast and striking Hokkaidō island. Marie caused the ship Toya Maru to sink in the Hokkaidō Strait. 1,361 people were killed and 400 were left missing.

Typhoon Nancy

 
DurationUnknown – Unknown
Peak intensityWinds not specified;

Typhoon Olga

 
DurationUnknown – Unknown
Peak intensityWinds not specified;

Super Typhoon Pamela

 
DurationUnknown – Unknown
Peak intensityWinds not specified;

Super Typhoon Ruby

 
DurationUnknown – Unknown
Peak intensityWinds not specified;

Super Typhoon Sally

 
DurationUnknown – Unknown
Peak intensityWinds not specified;

Typhoon Tilda

 
DurationUnknown – Unknown
Peak intensityWinds not specified;

1954 storm names

  • Agnes
  • Bess
  • Carmen
  • Della
  • Elaine
  • Faye
  • Gloria
  • Hester
  • Irma
  • Judy
  • Kit
  • Lola
  • Mamie
  • Nina
  • Ophelia
  • Phyllis
  • Rita
  • Susan
  • Tess
  • Viola
  • Winnie
  • Alice
  • Betty
  • Cora
  • Doris
  • Elsie
  • Flossie
  • Grace
  • Helen
  • Ida
  • June
  • Kathy
  • Lorna
  • Marie
  • Nancy
  • Olga
  • Pamela
  • Ruby
  • Sally
  • Tilda
  • Violet
  • Wilda
  • Anita
  • Billie
  • Clara
  • Dot
  • Ellen
  • Fran
  • Georgia
  • Hope
  • Iris
  • Joan
  • Kate
  • Louise
  • Marge
  • Nora
  • Opal
  • Patsy
  • Ruth
  • Sarah
  • Thelma
  • Vera
  • Wanda
  • Amy
  • Babs
  • Charlotte
  • Dinah
  • Emma
  • Freda
  • Gilda
  • Harriet
  • Ivy
  • Jean
  • Karen
  • Lucille
  • Mary
  • Nadine
  • Olive
  • Polly
  • Rose
  • Shirley
  • Trix
  • Virginia
  • Wendy

See also

Template:Tcportal

References

  1. ^ Digital Typhoon: Disaster Information Cite error: The named reference "Digital Typhoon:Disaster Information" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).

External links

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