SUMMARY: Part 1 of September TC Summary

From: Gary Padgett (garyp@ALAWEB.COM)
Date: Wed Dec 31 2003 - 13:08:35 EST


                  MONTHLY GLOBAL TROPICAL CYCLONE SUMMARY

                             SEPTEMBER, 2003
                                  Part 1

  (For general comments about the nature of these summaries, as well as
  information on how to download the tabular cyclone track files, see
  the Author's Note at the end of this summary.)

  SPECIAL NOTE: The September summary is being disseminated in two
  installments. This first part covers tropical cyclones forming during
  the first half of the month, plus contains the Feature of the Month.
  The second installment will cover storms forming during the latter
  half of the month.

  *************************************************************************

                           SEPTEMBER HIGHLIGHTS

  --> Long-lived intense Cape Verde hurricane makes devastating strike on
      U. S. East Coast--still a tropical storm in Ontario, Canada
  --> Nova Scotia experiences significant hurricane damage
  --> Another hurricane strikes the Baja California Peninsula and moves up
      entire Gulf of California
  --> Very deadly and devastating typhoon strikes South Korea
  --> Unusually early-season tropical storm forms in Southwest Indian Ocean

  *************************************************************************

               ***** Feature of the Month for September *****

                 SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE TROPICAL CYCLONE NAMES
                             2003 - 2004 SEASON

              TROPICAL CYCLONE NAMES for the AUSTRALIAN REGION

     The Australian Bureau of Meteorology maintains three Tropical
  Cyclone Warning Centres (TCWC): Perth, Western Australia; Darwin,
  Northern Territory; and Brisbane, Queensland. Each centre is allotted
  a separate list of tropical cyclone names for tropical cyclones forming
  within its area of responsibility (AOR). In addition a TCWC located at
  Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea (PNG)--a former Australian territory--
  maintains a list of native names to assign to the very rare tropical
  cyclones which form within its AOR.

     The AORs of the respective centres are:

  (1) Perth - 125E westward to 90E and south of 10S. Currently, and for
      at least the next few years, the Perth TCWC will issue warnings for
      any systems north of 10S and south and west of the Indonesian
      islands.

  (2) Darwin - 125E eastward to 138E and extending northward to the
      equator. There is a little irregularity with the eastern border
      in the Gulf of Carpentaria. The Darwin TCWC issues High Seas
      Warnings for the entire Gulf of Carpentaria, but Brisbane issues
      Tropical Cyclone Advices and names cyclones in the eastern portion
      of the Gulf. Also, currently, and for at least the next few years,
      the Darwin TCWC will issue warnings for any systems west of 125E
      and within the Indonesian archipelago in the Banda, Flores, and
      Java Seas.

  (3) Brisbane - 138E eastward to 160E and generally south of 10S. The
      northern border with the Port Moresby AOR is somewhat irregular.

  (4) Port Moresby, PNG - immediate vicinity of the island of New Guinea
      and eastward to 160E generally north of 10S although the southern
      border is somewhat irregular.

     Names for the 2003-2004 season (** indicates name has already been
  assigned):

          Perth Darwin Brisbane Port Moresby
  -----------------------------------------------------------------------

         Jana ** Debbie ** Fritz Guba
         Ken Evan Grace Ila
         Linda Fay Harvey Kama
         Monty George Ingrid Matere
         Nicky Helen Jim Rowe
         Oscar Ira Kate Tako
         Phoebe Jasmine Larry
         Raymond Kim Monica
         Sally Laura Nelson
         Tim Matt Odette
         Vivienne Pierre
         Willy Rebecca
         Adeline Sandy
         Bertie Tania
         Clare Vernon

           TROPICAL CYCLONE NAMES for the SOUTHWEST INDIAN OCEAN
                      and the SOUTH PACIFIC OCEAN

     The Tropical Cyclone Warning Centre (TCWC) at Nadi, Fiji, has
  tropical cyclone warning responsibility for the South Pacific east of
  160E and from the equator to 25S. The Meteorological Service of New
  Zealand at Wellington has warning responsibility for waters south of
  25S, but almost all tropical cyclones in this basin form north of 25S.
  When a rare cyclone forms in the Wellington area of responsibility
  (AOR), it usually will be assigned a name from the Fiji list (such as
  was done for Tropical Cyclone Gita in February, 1999.)

     Tropical cyclone warning responsibility for South Indian waters west
  of 90E are shared by several TCWCs. The Regional Specialty
  Meteorological Centre (RSMC) for the region is the office of Meteo
  France on the island of La Reunion. However, following a long-standing
  practice, the sub-regional centres at Mauritius and Madagascar share
  the responsibility for actually naming tropical storms with Mauritius
  naming systems east of 55E and Madagascar covering the area west of
  55E. RSMC La Reunion issues warnings for the basin independently of
  these sub-regional centres, but only advises regarding when or when not
  to assign a name to a developing cyclone.

     Names for the 2003-2004 season (** indicates name has already been
  assigned):

       Southwest Indian South Pacific
  -----------------------------------------------------------------------

     Abaimba ** Naledi Heta Sheila
     Beni ** Olie Ivy Tam
     Cela ** Patou Judy Urmil
     Darius ** Quilmane Kerry Vaianu
     Elita Ralph Lola Wati
     Frank Sefate Meena Xavier
     Gafilo Tom Nancy Yani
     Helma Umuri Olaf Zita
     Itseng Valetta Percy Arthur
     Jubela Wells Rae Becky
     Katiba Xivier
     Lenny Yvonne
     Moingaza Zuri

  *************************************************************************

                            ACTIVITY BY BASINS

  ATLANTIC (ATL) - North Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea, Gulf of Mexico

  Activity for September: 1 tropical depression
                           1 tropical storm
                           1 hurricane
                           2 major hurricanes **

  ** - one of these did not reach major hurricane status until October

                        Sources of Information
                        ----------------------

     Most of the information presented below was obtained from the
  various tropical cyclone products issued by the Tropical Prediction
  Center/National Hurricane Center (TPC/NHC) in Miami, Florida:
  discussions, public advisories, forecast/advisories, tropical weather
  outlooks, special tropical disturbance statements, etc. Some
  additional information may have been gleaned from the monthly
  summaries prepared by the hurricane specialists and available on
  TPC/NHC's website. All references to sustained winds imply a
  1-minute averaging period unless otherwise noted.

                  Atlantic Tropical Activity for September
                  ----------------------------------------

     September was an active month in the Atlantic basin. Over the period
  1950-2002, the month of September has averaged 3.5 named tropical storms,
  2.4 hurricanes, and 1.25 intense (Category 3+) hurricanes. September of
  2003 produced 4 named storms, 3 hurricanes, and 1 intense hurricane.
  (Kate, which formed in September, did not reach major hurricane status
  until October.) Over the 1950-2002 period, September has averaged about
  three intense hurricane days. This year, there were 13.5--due to the
  long-lived Cape Verde hurricanes Fabian and Isabel.

     As the month opened, Fabian was already a major hurricane and
  continued to intensify, reaching its peak intensity on 1 September.
  On the 5th the large, severe hurricane passed directly over the island
  of Bermuda as a Category 3 hurricane on the Saffir/Simpson scale--the
  most intense storm to strike the island since 1926. Since Fabian
  originated in August, it was covered completely in the August tropical
  cyclone summary. Also, on the first couple of days in September, the
  remnants of former Tropical Storm Grace were weakening over Texas and
  Arkansas.

     Tropical Storm Isabel was christened in the eastern Atlantic on
  6 September, and subsequently became the first Category 5 hurricane in
  the Atlantic basin since Hurricane Mitch in October, 1998. Isabel
  reached a peak intensity of 145 kts and maintained intense hurricane
  status for 8 days, Category 4 intensity for 6.75 days, and was a
  Category 5 hurricane for a total of 2.25 days. Isabel fortunately
  weakened as it approached the U. S. East Coast, and was a Category
  2 hurricane with 90-kt winds as it made landfall on the Outer Banks of
  North Carolina.

     Hurricane Juan formed on the 25th east-southeast of Bermuda.
  Initially more subtropical in nature, Juan soon acquired tropical storm
  characteristics and reached hurricane intensity the next day. Juan
  pursued a basic northward trajectory which carried the hurricane inland
  near Halifax, Nova Scotia, on the 29th as a Category 2 hurricane. The
  storm was reported to be the most destructive hurricane to strike the
  city of Halifax in well over a century. Tropical Storm Kate formed
  during the final week of September in the eastern Atlantic, briefly
  reached hurricane intensity early on the 30th, and then weakened back
  to tropical storm status. Kate regained hurricane intensity late on
  1 October, and on the 3rd became the season's third major hurricane.

     The only other tropical cyclone to form during September was Tropical
  Depression 14. This system formed southeast of the Cape Verde Islands
  and later moved northwestward, passing near or over the westernmost
  Cape Verdes as it weakened. The official TPC/NHC storm report on TD-14,
  written by James Franklin, can be found at the following URL:

     <http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/2003fourteen.shtml?>

     Since the TPC/NHC storm reports are now available online, I have not
  written detailed preliminary reports as I usually do. Links to the
  various cyclone reports can be found in the brief report on each storm.
  Henri and Isabel are covered in this installment--brief reports on
  Juan and Kate will follow in Part 2.

                          TROPICAL STORM HENRI
                                (TC-12)
                            3 - 13 September
                ----------------------------------------

     Tropical Storm Henri was a short-lived cyclone which formed in the
  eastern Gulf of Mexico in early September from a tropical wave which
  had left the coast of Africa several days earlier. Henri reached an
  estimated peak intensity of 50 kts on 5 September, then weakened very
  quickly to tropical depression status and crossed the Florida Peninsula,
  moving eastward into the Atlantic. The depression never regained
  tropical storm intensity in the Atlantic and soon became extratropical.

     The official storm report on Henri, authored by Daniel Brown and
  Miles Lawrence, is available online at the following URL:

     <http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/2003henri.shtml?>

     The peak Best Track intensity of 50 kts represents an upgrade from the
  peak operational intensity of 45 kts. The Best Track file is contained
  in the storm report referenced above. The operational track, including
  the extratropical gale stage, can be found in the tropical cyclone tracks
  file for September prepared by the author.

                            HURRICANE ISABEL
                                (TC-13)
                            6 - 22 September
                  ------------------------------------

     Hurricane Isabel was one of the truly great Atlantic hurricanes of
  the past century. Based on the operational MSW estimates, Isabel was
  a hurricane for 11.5 days and an intense hurricane for 8.0 days. Even
  more significantly, the great storm was at Saffir/Simpson Category 5
  intensity for 2.25 days, making it the third longest-lived Category 5
  hurricane since the beginning of the reconnaissance era in 1944. The
  hurricane also maintained 130-kt winds (equivalent to a Western Pacific
  super typhoon) for four full days. Another significant feature of Isabel
  was that it reached Category 5 intensity further east (45.9W) than any
  other known Category 5 storm. The previous easternmost Catetory 5
  development was Hurricane Cleo in 1958 (49.8W), but it is very question-
  able whether Cleo was truly a Category 5 hurricane. The only other
  hurricanes to reach Category 5 intensity east of 60W, based on the
  current Best Track file, were Donna in 1960 (58.0W) and Hugo in 1989
  (54.6W). (NOTE: The other Atlantic hurricanes maintaining Category 5
  intensity longer than Isabel were Dog in 1950 (2.5 days) and Allen in
  1980 (3.0 days)).

     Very, very fortunately for the U. S. East Coast, Isabel had weakened
  into a 90-kt Category 2 hurricane by the time it made landfall on North
  Carolina's Outer Banks on 18 September. The storm was still deadly and
  destructive, however. At least 16 fatalities were directly attributed
  to Isabel, mostly from drowning. There were some more deaths indirectly
  related to the hurricane. The storm pushed water levels in the upper
  Chesapeake Bay to record levels. Levels in Washington DC, Annapolis and
  Baltimore exceeded the previous record levels established in the 1933
  Chesapeake-Potomac hurricane. Delaware Bay and the Delaware River also
  experienced a significant storm surge. The total damage caused by
  Isabel in the U. S. is currently estimated at $3.37 billion.

     Isabel was able to generate the so-called "annular" hurricane struc-
  ture around the time it reached its maximum intensity. Annular hurri-
  canes generally display a large eye surrounded by a solid ring of
  intense convection, with little convection elsewhere. Such storms are
  usually not prone to the ups and downs in intensity related to the
  eyewall replacement cycles commonly seen in intense tropical cyclones.
  One very interesting feature of Isabel was the formation of mesovortices
  in the eyewall. These were very striking in satellite imagery, at one
  point being arranged in a pentagonal "starfish" pattern.

     Tropical Storm Isabel was named on the morning of 6 September in the
  far eastern Atlantic, being upgraded directly from a tropical wave.
  Hurricane intensity was reached on 7 September, and by 1200 UTC on the
  8th Isabel had become the season's second intense hurricane. Category 5
  intensity was initially reached at 1800 UTC on the 11th and maintained
  through 1200 UTC on the 14th (except for a 12-hour period on the 13th).
  The peak operational MSW was estimated at 140 kts, but this was nudged
  upward 5 kts during post-storm analysis. Isabel was still a tropical
  storm when it made its final landfall in Canada (after crossing Lake
  Erie). According to data sent by Chris Fogarty of the Canadian
  Hurricane Centre, at least two stations on the north shore of Lake Erie
  (Port Colborne and Long Point) recorded sustained winds exceeding gale
  force. Chris' report on Isabel can be accessed at the following link:

     <http://www.novaweather.net/Isabel_Data/Storm_Summary.pdf>

     The official NHC report for "super" Hurricane Isabel is not yet
  available online, but Jack Beven is working on it, and presumably it
  will be ready soon. For that reason, and in the interest of getting
  caught up with my tropical cyclone backlog, I elected not to attempt
  to write a normal preliminary report on Isabel. Interested persons
  should periodically check the following link on TPC/NHC's website:

     <http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/2003atlan.shtml>

  *************************************************************************

  NORTHEAST PACIFIC (NEP) - North Pacific Ocean East of Longitude 180

  Activity for September: 1 tropical storm
                           2 hurricanes

                        Sources of Information
                        ----------------------

     Most of the information presented below was obtained from the
  various tropical cyclone products issued by the Tropical Prediction
  Center/National Hurricane Center (TPC/NHC) in Miami, Florida (or the
  Central Pacific Hurricane Center (CPHC) in Honolulu, Hawaii, for
  locations west of longitude 140W): discussions, public advisories,
  forecast/advisories, tropical weather outlooks, special tropical
  disturbance statements, etc. Some additional information may have
  been gleaned from the monthly summaries prepared by the hurricane
  specialists and available on TPC/NHC's website. All references to
  sustained winds imply a 1-minute averaging period unless otherwise
  noted.

              Northeast Pacific Tropical Activity for September
              -------------------------------------------------

     September was a month of near-normal activity in the Northeast Pacific
  basin. Over the 1971-2002 period, the averages for the month are 3.5
  named storms, 2.2 hurricanes, and 1.1 intense hurricanes. September of
  2003 produced 3 named storms, 2 hurricanes, but no intense hurricane.
  Hurricane Marty, however, became a Category 2 hurricane shortly before
  striking the southern tip of Mexico's Baja California Peninsula. As the
  month opened, Hurricane Jimena was beginning to weaken as it passed to
  the south of Hawaii's Big Island. The storm continued to weaken as it
  moved west-southwestward across the Central North Pacific, crossing the
  International Dateline into the Western North Pacific just before
  dissipating. Other than Marty, the other named storms forming in
  September were Tropical Storm Kevin and Hurricane Linda. Kevin was just
  a minimal tropical storm for only six hours while Linda reached minimal
  hurricane strength for 12 hours before quickly weakening.

     There was one additional system which warrants mentioning. A tropical
  disturbance developed around 1000 nm west-southwest of the tip of Baja
  California on 4 September. The area of low pressure remained stationary
  for about 24 hours, then began a slow northward drift. On the 5th
  convection increased somewhat around the center, prompting SAB to assign
  a Dvorak rating of T2.5/2.5. Concurrent Tropical Weather Outlooks from
  TPC/NHC indicated that a tropical depression could be forming. However,
  early on 6 September convection began to diminish and the T-numbers from
  SAB began to quickly come down. (This system was being rated during the
  period 4-7 September, and the NRL temporary number was 91E.)

     Reports for the cyclones are already available (or shortly will be)
  on TPC/NHC's website, so I have not written the usual detailed
  preliminary reports for these storms, but only a brief synopsis of
  each which will include the link to the individual storm reports.
  In the case of Tropical Storm Kevin, however, Kevin Boyle submitted a
  short report on his namesake shortly after the cyclone's brief life,
  so I have included that below. Kevin and Linda are included in this
  installment--a brief report on Hurricane Marty will follow in Part 2.

                         TROPICAL STORM KEVIN
                               (TC-11E)
                            3 - 6 September
               ----------------------------------------

     This short-lived wimpy tropical storm formed from a disturbance that
  moved westward off the coast of Mexico near Manzanillo. This was being
  noted in East Pacific STWOs issued by NHC on 31 August. The system
  moved generally west-northwestward for a couple of days and was expected
  to only slowly strengthen and organise. Even when the first warning was
  issued at 1500 UTC on 3 September the disturbance did not look very
  impressive, and satellite classifications at this time were T1.0 at the
  most. The initial position of the LLCC was located near 19.2N, 111.9W,
  and this was only a rough estimate due to the difficulty in pinpointing
  the centre. The depression was located in an area of modest north-
  easterly shear, and slow strengthening was forecast to continue until
  the system reached cooler SSTs in two to three days time. Factors
  justifying issuance of the first warning were: a southerly wind and a
  1001.6 mb pressure reported from Socorro Island at 03/1200 UTC, deep
  convection becoming more concentrated near Socorro as evidenced from
  satellite imagery, and data from a QuikScat pass at 0100 UTC. At the
  time of the first advisory the depression was centred roughly 250 nm
  south-southwest of Cabo San Lucas.

     Tropical Depression Eleven-E continued to move west-northwestward,
  along with the monsoon flow, with a MSW of 30 kts. The storm possessed
  a large circulation which was elongated northwest-southeast with
  abundant convection in a curved band southwest of the centre. The LLCC
  remained difficult to locate and three satellite fixes were east of the
  previous position at 04/0300 UTC near a burst of convection. Further
  relocation at 04/1500 UTC (to 21.2N, 114.3W) was based on
  satellite and microwave imagery from a 1200 UTC TRMM pass. The
  depression, still over SSTs of 28-29 C, had a slim chance of making the
  grade as a tropical storm before moving into increasingly colder waters.
  It did so at 04/2100 UTC but for six hours only (warning #6) and unduly
  peaked at 35 kts. QuikScat data at 04/1335 UTC found a large area of
  30 kt winds surrounding the nucleus of the cyclone with rain contaminated
  winds as high as 55 kts in the southwestern quadrant. The core of Kevin
  was composed of multiple swirls of clouds rotating around it, and this
  made life difficult for the satellite analysts and NHC in determining
  where the actual centre was. It was decided to locate the position of
  the broad circulation as a whole to overcome this problem. At the time
  of its upgrade to tropical storm status, Kevin was located approximately
  300 nm west-southwest of Cabo San Lucas.

     At 0300 UTC on 5 September Kevin was downgraded to a tropical depres-
  sion, the east-northeasterly wind shear exposing the LLCC as the tropical
  cyclone began to make its way towards cooler waters. Enhanced infrared
  satellite imagery and a 0436 UTC TRMM pass located the LLCC displaced
  90 nm from the deep convection, and by the end of the day there was no
  associated thunderstorm activity. On the final forecast/advisory at
  06/0300 UTC, Kevin was just basically a large swirl of low-level clouds
  located roughly 475 nm west of Cabo San Lucas. The remnants of the
  depression persisted for several days, eventually drifting northward,
  then east-northeastward, and finally to the east-southeast.

     There have been no reports of damage or casualties resulting from
  ephemeral Tropical Storm Kevin.

  (Report written by Kevin Boyle)

  NOTE: The official NHC storm report on Tropical Storm Kevin, written
  by Stacy Stewart, is now available online at the following link:

     <http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/2003kevin.shtml?>

                            HURRICANE LINDA
                                (TC-12E)
                           14 - 17 September
                 -------------------------------------

     Tropical Depression 12E formed on 14 September about 300 nm west-
  southwest of Manzanillo, Mexico. Six hours later the depression was
  upgraded to Tropical Storm Linda. Linda moved northwestward and
  intensified steadily, reaching hurricane intensity around 1800 UTC when
  centered approximately 265 nm southwest of Cabo San Lucas on the tip of
  the Baja California Peninsula. Linda did not intensify beyond 65 kts,
  and was downgraded back to a tropical storm only 12 hours after being
  upgraded to hurricane status. Linda's track turned toward the west
  and the storm steadily weakened, the last advisory being issued at
  2100 UTC on 17 September.

     The official storm report on Hurricane Linda had not yet been placed
  on NHC's website, but likely will be within the near future. Interested
  persons should periodically check the following link:

     <http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/2003epac.shtml>

  *************************************************************************

  NORTHWEST PACIFIC (NWP) - North Pacific Ocean West of Longitude 180

  Activity for September: 3 tropical depressions **
                           2 typhoons
                           1 super typhoon

  ** - None of these were classified as tropical depressions by JTWC. One
       of these was named by PAGASA and treated as a tropical depression
       by some of the other Asian TCWCs; two others were classified as
       tropical depressions by JMA only.

                        Sources of Information
                        ----------------------

     Most of the information presented below is based upon tropical
  cyclone warnings and significant tropical weather outlooks issued
  by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center of the U. S. Air Force and
  Navy (JTWC), located at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. In the companion
  tropical cyclone tracks file, I normally annotate track coordinates
  from some of the various Asian warning centers when their center
  positions differ from JTWC's by usually 40-50 nm or more. All
  references to sustained winds imply a 1-minute averaging period
  unless otherwise noted.

     Michael V. Padua of Naga City in the Philippines, owner of the
  Typhoon 2000 website, normally sends me cyclone tracks based upon
  warnings issued by the Japanese Meteorological Agency (JMA) and the
  Philippines' Atmospheric, Geophysical & Astronomical Services
  Administration (PAGASA). Also, Huang Chunliang of Fuzhou City, China,
  sends me each month tracks obtained from warnings issued by the
  National Meteorological Center of China (NMCC), the Central Weather
  Bureau of Taiwan (CWBT) and the Hong Kong Observatory (HKO). A very
  special thanks to Michael and Chunliang for the assistance they so
  reliably provide.

     In the title line for each storm I have referenced all the cyclone
  names/numbers I have available: JTWC's depression number, the
  JMA-assigned name (if any), JMA's tropical storm numeric designator,
  and PAGASA's name for systems forming in or passing through their
  area of warning responsibility.

              Northwest Pacific Tropical Activity for September
              -------------------------------------------------

     As the month of September opened, intense Typhoon Dujuan was passing
  just south of the southern tip of Taiwan. A couple of days later a
  somewhat weaker typhoon made landfall in southeastern China near Hong
  Kong. The complete report on Typhoon Dujuan was included in the August
  tropical cyclone summary. Three typhoons came to life during September
  with Super Typhoon Maemi by far the most significant. The intense storm
  peaked at 150 kts on the 10th, and although somewhat weaker by the time
  it landed in South Korea, Maemi still caused much destruction and loss
  of life in that nation. The other September typhoons, Choi-wan and
  Koppu, both were typhoons of moderate intensity which pursued generally
  northeasterly tracks that carried them southeast of Japan into the
  open North Pacific.

     In addition to the typhoons, three other systems were classified as
  tropical depressions by one or more of the Asian TCWCs, although not by
  JTWC. The first of these was tracked as a tropical depression by JMA
  only on the 2nd and 3rd as it moved generally northward several hundred
  miles east of the Northern Marianas. JTWC had assigned this area a
  fair development potential on 31 August, but downgraded it to poor on
  1 September.

     Another system which only JMA referenced as a tropical depression
  formed on 12 September at a fairly high latitude about 200 nm southeast
  of Tokyo. JTWC initially assigned this system a fair potential for
  development, but no TCFA was issued. The system consisted of a well-
  defined fully-exposed LLCC with associated convection displaced to the
  southeast. Shear was relatively weak, but there was very little
  divergence over the area. (No track was given for this system in the
  companion cyclone tracks file.)

     The third tropical depression was named Quiel by PAGASA. This system,
  as tracked by PAGASA, formed well to the east of the Philippines and
  eventually tracked into the northern South China Sea. However, there was
  a "jump" of four degrees of longitude on 17 September. This was another
  confusing "monsoon mess" situation similar to that which had occurred in
  August with Tropical Depression Lakay and Tropical Storm Vamco. A second
  circulation arose in the general region which PAGASA dubbed Roskas and
  which subsequently became Typhoon Choi-wan. More details on Quiel can
  be found in the September tropical cyclone tracks file.

     The reports on Typhoons Maemi, Choi-wan and Koppu were written by
  Kevin Boyle and with significant contributions by Huang Chunliang. A
  special thanks to these gentlemen for their assistance. The report on
  Super Typhoon Maemi is included in this installment. Reports on Choi-wan
  and Koppu will follow in Part 2.

                          SUPER TYPHOON MAEMI
                         (TC-15W / 0314 / POGI)
                            3 - 15 September
               ------------------------------------------

  Maemi: contributed by DPR (North) Korea is the cicada, a type of insect
         which chirps during the summer months when typhoons threaten
         Korea

  Pogi: PAGASA name, means 'handsome'

  A. Storm Origins
  ----------------

     Super Typhoon Maemi's explosive career began when an area of
  convection formed approximately 160 nm southeast of Yap (7.6N, 140.3E).
  This suspect area was noted in JTWC's STWO issued at 0600 UTC on
  2 September, having persisted for the previous 12 hours. At this time
  microwave imagery, combined with a QuikScat pass, indicated a broad
  surface trough while animated multi-spectral satellite pictures revealed
  cycling and disorganised convection. Upper-air analyses showed both
  diffluence and shearing conditions to be moderate. The potential for
  the disturbance's development during the next 24 hours was assessed as
  poor. This was upgraded to fair status at 04/1300 UTC when convection
  was seen to become better organised in enhanced satellite animations,
  and a 04/0731 UTC QuikScat pass revealed a weak, broad and elongated
  LLCC. Guam was reporting light winds from the northwest and surface
  pressures of 1009 mb; the centre of the disturbance was located
  approximately 310 nm to the southeast. Shearing conditions were clearly
  evident in animated satellite images, and 200-mb charts from the
  University of Wisconsin CIMSS were showing 20-30 kts of northeasterly
  shear over the system. Despite this, JTWC issued a TCFA at 05/0200 UTC
  after a 04/2211 UTC SSM/I pass depicted deep convective bands in the
  southern quadrants wrapping into the LLCC.

     Warnings were initiated at 05/1800 UTC on Tropical Depression 15W,
  located approximately 65 nm west-northwest of Guam. At that time a
  marked increase in deep convection was noted over the LLCC in enhanced
  infrared satellite imagery. TD-15W intensified at a climatological rate
  as it moved west-northwestward at 15 kts under the steering influence of
  a low to mid-level ridge north-northeast of the system. The depression
  was upgraded to a 40-kt tropical storm on the second warning, issued at
  06/0000 UTC, based on a 40-kt QuikScat observation and CI estimates of
  30 kts and 45 kts. The Prognostic Reasoning message issued by JTWC at
  this time called for TS-15W to continue moving west-northwestward through
  96 hours. After 96 hours a deep trough over eastern China was expected
  to weaken the mid-level ridge over western China, causing the tropical
  cyclone to change to a north-northwesterly heading. In the meantime,
  the storm was predicted to intensify due to favourable outflow and shear
  conditions.

  B. Track and Intensity History
  ------------------------------

     Tropical Storm 15W continued moving west-northwestward at 13 kts,
  arriving at a position approximately 230 nm west-northwest of Guam by
  0600 UTC on 6 September. At this time JMA upgraded the system to
  tropical storm intensity and assigned the name Maemi. Upper-level
  analysis charts indicated that the environment remained conducive to
  further strengthening, and the MSW increased by five knots on the next
  two warnings, issued at 1200 UTC and 1800 UTC, to 45 kts and 50 kts,
  respectively. During this period the storm tracked northwestward
  before reverting back to its original west-northwesterly heading at
  07/0000 UTC, by which time the maximum intensity had risen to 60 kts.
  Maemi became a typhoon at 07/1200 UTC when located approximately 650 nm
  southeast of Okinawa, Japan. Only a 5-kt increase in the MSW was noted
  during the 8th, and despite the system's becoming further organised
  (with an eye beginning to form at 1800 UTC as seen in enhanced infrared
  imagery), the overall intensity remained steady at 75 kts until the 9th.
  Then Maemi got down to some serious intensification. PAGASA had little
  cause for concern, except for enhancement of the southwest monsoon, as
  it was clear by this time that Typhoon Pogi (their internal name) was
  curving away from the Philippines.

     In fact, by 0000 UTC on 9 September Typhoon Maemi/Pogi had turned to a
  northwesterly heading. The 16-nm irregular eye, as depicted in a SSM/I
  pass at 08/2253 UTC, was centred approximately 305 nm south-southeast of
  Okinawa. Rapid strengthening had already begun with the MSW jumping
  from 75 kts to 90 kts. The MSW took a bigger jump to 115 kts at 09/0600
  UTC, and by 09/1200 UTC Maemi was a super typhoon with a MSW of 130 kts.
  JTWC's wind distribution on the 1200 UTC warning (#16) indicated that
  Maemi was a fairly small cyclone with 100-kt winds extending 20 nm from
  the centre and a gale radius of 130 nm. Super Typhoon Maemi was expected
  to be influenced by the mid-level ridge to the north-northeast for at
  least another 24 hours or so before turning poleward into a weakness
  induced by a shortwave trough over China. This trough was expected to
  engage Maemi and turn the storm northeastward between Korea and Japan.

     At 0000 UTC on 10 September Super Typhoon Maemi was approaching the
  southern part of the Ryukyu Island chain and passing approximately 180 nm
  south of Okinawa, Japan, moving on a northwesterly heading at a slower
  pace of 5 kts. However, Maemi was not to make its closest point of
  approach to Okinawa for another 36 hours. Animated water vapour imagery
  showed that outflow from the northwest quadrant had merged into the
  upper-level southwesterly flow ahead of the major shortwave trough over
  eastern China. This had the effect of whisking away the cyclone's
  exhaust, and by 10/0000 UTC the MSW had reached monumental proportions.
  Based on CI estimates of 127, 140 and 155 kts, the MSW reached a peak of
  150 kts, gusting to 180 kts. Unfortunately, Miyakojima lay in the path
  of the super typhoon and the island had to endure extreme conditions
  while the eye passed by just to the northeast at 10/1800 UTC. The lowest
  pressure recorded on Miyakojima was 912.0 mb at 1912 UTC. The intensity
  began to fall at this point to 135 kts--no consolation to Miyakojima,
  however.

  Editor's Note: The peak 10-min avg MSW estimates from JMA and NMCC
  were 105 kts and 120 kts, respectively. PAGASA was estimating the
  intensity of Typhoon Pogi/Maemi at 100 kts at the time the storm moved
  out of that agency's AOR at 10/1200 UTC.

     Super Typhoon Maemi was turning poleward at 0000 UTC on 11 September
  as the steering flow influencing the typhoon changed. This allowed the
  storm to creep a little bit closer to Okinawa, Japan, and the eye passed
  approximately 130 nm west-northwest of Okinawa. At this juncture Maemi
  began to accelerate as it moved northward into the East China Sea, the
  MSW holding steady at 135 kts (although it had dipped briefly to 130 kts
  at 11/0000 UTC). A definite weakening trend set in at 11/1800 UTC when
  Maemi lost its super typhoon title and the MSW dropped to 120 kts. This
  was the result of increasingly hostile environmental conditions caused
  by the deepening trough encroaching from the west.

     The next day at 12/0000 UTC Maemi was located approximately 160 nm
  south of Cheju Island, moving smartly toward the north-northeast at
  23 kts towards the Korean Peninsula. The MSW was still estimated at 120
  kts, but convection on the western side had weakened. At 12/0600 UTC
  Maemi was nearing Cheju Island with winds still near 100 kts. Six
  hours later the typhoon was located approximately 30 nm southwest of
  Pusan and was poised to skirt the southeastern coast of South Korea.
  Weakening continued, albeit slowly at first, but the Korean Peninsula
  took a significant amount of strength away and Maemi crossed South Korea
  as an 80 to 90-kt system. By 12/1800 UTC Typhoon Maemi was undergoing
  transition to a extratropical system as it pushed northeastward at 24
  kts over the Sea of Japan. This extratropical conversion was more or
  less complete six hours later and the MSW fell below typhoon intensity.
  The circulation of the once-powerful Maemi began to fall apart, and
  multi-spectral satellite imagery indicated that the mid-level circulation
  centre had sheared 100 nm to the north-northeast of the LLCC. The final
  warning from JTWC was issued at 13/0000 UTC; the last position was 40.5N,
  134.8E, or approximately 300 nm west of Misawa, Japan. JMA declared
  Maemi extratropical at 14/0000 UTC and tracked the remnants north-
  northeastward to a position east of the Kamchatka Peninsula where the
  system had weakened to a 45-kt gale by the 15th.

  C. Meteorological Observations from China
  -----------------------------------------

     All the observations in this section were obtained from a report sent
  by Huang Chunliang of Fuzhou City, Fujian Province, China. A special
  thanks to Chunliang for compiling and sending the information.

  (1) Rainfall Observations from Taiwan (WMO stations)
  ----------------------------------------------------

  City/County Station Period Rainfall
                            (WMO ID) (UTC) (mm)
  --------------------------------------------------------------------
  Ilan City, Ilan 46708 09/1600-10/1600 122.0
  Chu-tzu-hu, Taipei City 46693 09/1600-10/1600 120.5
  Taipei, Taipei City 46692/58968 09/1600-10/1600 114.0

  (2) Rainfall Observations from Taiwan (Automatic weather stations)
  ------------------------------------------------------------------

  City/County Station Period Rainfall
                            (CWB ID) (UTC) (mm)
  --------------------------------------------------------------------

  Ilan County C1U61 09/1600-10/1600 227.5
  Ilan County C1U52 09/1600-10/1600 201.5
  Ilan County C1U63 09/1600-10/1600 186.0
  Ilan County C1U51 09/1600-10/1600 167.5
  Ilan County C1U67 09/1600-10/1600 167.0
  Ilan County C1U66 09/1600-10/1600 160.0
  Ilan County C1U62 09/1600-10/1600 123.5
  Ilan County C0U60 09/1600-10/1600 123.0
  Ilan County C1U69 09/1600-10/1600 122.5
  Ilan County C1U59 09/1600-10/1600 111.0
  Ilan County C0U64 09/1600-10/1600 108.0
  Ilan County C1U50 09/1600-10/1600 106.5
  Taipei County L1A81 09/1600-10/1600 220.0
  Taipei County L1A83 09/1600-10/1600 163.0
  Taipei County 01A17 09/1600-10/1600 160.0
  Taipei County C0A53 09/1600-10/1600 158.0
  Taipei County L1A82 09/1600-10/1600 146.5
  Taipei County L1A80 09/1600-10/1600 144.0
  Taipei County C0A57 09/1600-10/1600 142.5
  Taipei County A0A9M 09/1600-10/1600 135.5
  Taipei County 01A21 09/1600-10/1600 132.0
  Taipei County C0A54 09/1600-10/1600 131.0
  Taipei County L1A79 09/1600-10/1600 130.5
  Taipei County 01A44 09/1600-10/1600 130.0
  Taipei County C0A55 09/1600-10/1600 126.0
  Taipei County C1A9N 09/1600-10/1600 125.5
  Taipei County C0A51 09/1600-10/1600 125.5
  Taipei County C0A58 09/1600-10/1600 125.5
  Taipei County C1A65 09/1600-10/1600 124.5
  Taipei County C0A9D 09/1600-10/1600 115.0
  Taipei County C1A64 09/1600-10/1600 112.0
  Taipei County L1A84 09/1600-10/1600 111.0
  Taipei County C1A70 09/1600-10/1600 105.0
  Taipei City C1A69 09/1600-10/1600 143.5
  Taipei City 01A42 09/1600-10/1600 115.0
  Taipei City 01A43 09/1600-10/1600 115.0
  Taipei City C0A9H 09/1600-10/1600 112.0
  Taipei City C1A73 09/1600-10/1600 109.5
  Taipei City C0A9C 09/1600-10/1600 107.0
  Hsinchu County C0D36 09/1600-10/1600 146.5
  Hsinchu County C1D40 09/1600-10/1600 122.5
  Hsinchu County C1D39 09/1600-10/1600 115.5
  Hsinchu County C1D42 09/1600-10/1600 113.0
  Hsinchu County 21D15 10/1600-11/1600 100.0
  Yunlin County C0K24 09/1600-10/1600 141.5
  Miaoli County C0E41 09/1600-10/1600 124.0
  Miaoli County C1E47 09/1600-10/1600 102.5
  Taoyuan County 01C40 09/1600-10/1600 106.0
  Taoyuan County A0C54 09/1600-10/1600 103.5
  Taoyuan County 21C08 09/1600-10/1600 101.0
  Chia-I County C1M62 09/1600-10/1600 103.5

  D. Meteorological Observations from Japan
  -----------------------------------------

     The information in this section was also sent by Huang Chunliang.

  (1) Peak Wind Observations (from Okinawa)
  -----------------------------------------

  Station Station Lat Lon Alt MSW Time Gust Time
  Name (WMO ID) (m) (kts) (UTC) (kts) (UTC)
  ---------------------------------------------------------------------
  Naha 47936 26.2N 127.7E 28 37 10/1020 63 11/1012
  Kumejima 47929 26.3N 126.8E 4 35 11/0740 71 11/0825
  Miyakojima 47927 24.8N 125.3E 40 75 10/1800 144 10/1812
  Ishigakijima 47918 24.3N 124.2E 6 42 10/1750 78 10/2006
  Iriomotejima 47917 24.4N 123.8E 9 36 11/0210 61 10/0041
  Irabu 93011* 24.8N 125.2E 10 82 10/1950

  * - JMA station code

  Note: Only stations that reported sustained winds (10-min avg) greater
  than gale force or gusts greater than typhoon force are included above.

  (2) More gust reports (from Okinawa & Nagasaki)
  -----------------------------------------------

  Station WMO Lat Lon Alt Gust Time
  Name ID (m) (kts) UTC
  ------------------------------------------------------------------
  Miyakojima, Okinawa 47927 24.8N 125.3E 40 85 10/1330
  Miyakojima, Okinawa 47927 24.8N 125.3E 40 91 10/1510
  Miyakojima, Okinawa 47927 24.8N 125.3E 40 107 10/1550
  Miyakojima, Okinawa 47927 24.8N 125.3E 40 117 10/1700
  Miyakojima, Okinawa 47927 24.8N 125.3E 40 143 10/1740
  Nago, Okinawa 47940 26.6N 128.0E 6 59 11/1500
  Sasebo, Nagasaki 47812 33.2N 129.7E 4 59 12/0711
  Hirado, Nagasaki 47805 33.4N 129.6E 58 61 12/0820
  Izuhara, Nagasaki 47800 34.2N 129.3E 4 79 12/1020
  Izuhara, Nagasaki 47800 34.2N 129.3E 4 90 12/1136

  Note: Above are those which were highlighted in the JMA local warnings
  and could not be regarded as the peak values.

  (3) Records (from Miyakojima, Okinawa)
  --------------------------------------

    (a) As was noted in Part 1, the station reported a peak gust of 144
    kts at 10/1812 UTC, which turned out to be the fourth highest daily
    peak that had ever been recorded in Okinawa, or the seventh highest
    daily peak that had ever been recorded in Japan (see Section d for
    the Top Ten).

    (b) The station reported a minimum pressure of 912.0 hPa (sea level) at
    10/1912 UTC, which turned out to be the second lowest daily value that
    had ever been recorded in Okinawa, or the fourth lowest daily value
    that had ever been recorded in Japan (see Section e for the Top Ten).

    (c) Rains of 58.5 mm recorded from 10/2021 UTC through 10/2121 UTC
    represent the peak hourly value for the station during the passage
    of Maemi. Rains of 402.5 mm recorded from 10/0800 UTC through
    11/0800 UTC broke the former record 24-hour total ever recorded in
    September by the station. A storm total of 465 mm was recorded from
    08/1500 UTC through 12/0600 UTC.

    (d) The Top Ten typhoons that brought the highest daily peak gusts to
    Japan have been listed below:

  Rank JMA Storm Pk Gust Station Date
       TY # Name (kts) Name (JST)
  ------------------------------------------------------------------

  01* 6618 Cora 166 Miyakojima, Okinawa Sep 05, 1966
  02 6118 Nancy 164 Murotomisaki, Kochi Sep 16, 1961
  03 6816 Della 155 Miyakojima, Okinawa Sep 22, 1968
  04 7009 Wilda 153 Naze, Kagoshima Aug 13, 1970
  05 6816 Della 152 Miyakojima, Okinawa Sep 23, 1968
  06 6523 Shirley 150 Murotomisaki, Kochi Sep 10, 1965
  07 0314 Maemi 144 Miyakojima, Okinawa Sep 11, 2003
  08 5612 Emma 143 Naha, Okinawa Sep 08, 1956
  09 6420 Wilda 141 Uwajima, Ehime Sep 25, 1964
  10 9413 Doug 136 Yonagunijima, Okinawa Aug 07, 1994
  10 7705 Vera 136 Ishigakijima, Okinawa Jul 31, 1977

  Note (*): It should be noted that the station located on top of
  Mt. Fuji recorded a peak SSW gust of 177 kts associated with TY 6626
  (Typhoon Ida) on 25 September 1966. But it was not included in the
  roster above since it was reported by a mountain station.

    (e) The Top Ten typhoons that brought the lowest daily minimum
    pressures (sea level) to Japan have been listed:

  Rank JMA Storm Min Press Station Date
       TY # Name (hPa) Name (JST)
  ------------------------------------------------------------------

  01 7709 Babe 907.3 Okinoerabu, Kagoshima Sep 09, 1977
  02 5914 Sarah 908.1 Miyakojima, Okinawa Sep 15, 1959
  03 ---- ---- 911.6 Murotomisaki, Kochi Sep 21, 1934
  04 0314 Maemi 912.0 Miyakojima, Okinawa Sep 11, 2003
  05 ---- Ida 916.1 Makurazaki, Kagoshima Sep 17, 1945
  06 6118 Nancy 918.0 Naze, Kagoshima Sep 15, 1961
  07 ---- Ida 922.6 Kagoshima, Kagoshima Sep 17, 1945
  08 6314 Gloria 923.5 Ishigakijima, Okinawa Sep 10, 1963
  09 6314 Gloria 926.3 Ishigakijima, Okinawa Sep 11, 1963
  10 9609 Herb 927.1 Iriomotejima, Okinawa Jul 31, 1996

  (4) Hourly Sustained Wind/Pressure Observations
  -----------------------------------------------

  1. Station: Miyakojima, Okinawa (WMO 47927)
  -------------------------------------------

  Latitude: 24.79 N Longitude: 125.28 E Altitude: 40 m

     The hourly MSW (10-min avg) exceeded gale force at Miyakojima from
  1300 UTC on 10 September through 0500 UTC on the 11th, except for a
  two-hour drop off when the station was in the typhoon's eye. The peak
  hourly MSW of 75 kts occurred at 10/1800 UTC, shortly before eye passage.
  The minimum hourly SLP recorded in the eye was 913.2 hPa at 10/1900 UTC.

  2. Station: Irabu, Okinawa (JMA 93011)
  --------------------------------------

  Latitude: 24.83 N Longitude: 125.17 E Altitude: 10 m

     The hourly MSW (10-min avg) exceeded gale force at Irabu from 0900
  UTC on 10 September through 0400 UTC on the 11th except for 0100 UTC
  on the 11th. The eye of Maemi did not pass over this station. The
  maximum hourly MSW of 76 kts occurred at 10/2000 UTC.

  (5) Rainfall Observations
  -------------------------

     Only a report highlighted in one of the JMA local warnings was given
  below due to my (Huang Chunliang's) personal time restriction:

  10/2000 UTC - 10/2100 UTC Shimojishima, Okinawa 108 mm

  Note--Two important sources of this special report should be noted
  here:

  1. A special report prepared by the local meteorological service of
  Okinawa, which is under the control of JMA:

     <http://www.okinawa-jma.go.jp/news/tifu0314/td0314.pdf>
     (Size: 318 Kbytes -- Language: Japanese)

  2. Raw data on the offical web pages of JMA (Japanese version):

     <http://www.jma.go.jp/>

  E. Meteorological Observations from Korea
  -----------------------------------------

     Roger Edson sent along some observations from South Korea taken
  on 12 September through 1300 UTC. A special thanks to Roger for
  passing along this information.

  (1) Rainfall Observations
  -------------------------

     Below are listed the daily precipitation amounts exceeding 100 mm.
  Presumably, these are the rainfall totals from 0000 through 1300 UTC
  on the 12th, around the time of landfall near Pusan.

  Station Precipitation (mm) Station Precipitation (mm)
  ---------------------------------------------------------------------
  Wando 119.5 Yeosu 214.0
  Suncheon 159.0 Jangheung 134.0
  Haenam 134.5 Goheung 273.5
  Jeju 231.5 Uljin 125.5
  Daegu 135.0 Pohang 131.5
  Gumi 118.0 Yeongcheon 122.5
  Masan 152.0 Tongyeong 139.0
  Jinju 250.5 Geochang 146.5
  Hapcheon 169.0 Miryang 159.5
  Sancheong 221.5 Geoje 116.5
  Namhae 401.5

  (2) Wind Observations
  ---------------------

     At 12/1215 UTC the Pusan Airport was reporting sustained SSE winds
  of 59 kts, gusting to 77 kts. One hour later the same station was
  reporting sustained SSW winds of 46 kts, gusting to 62 kts.

     A very important wind observation was made on the island of Cheju,
  just off the coast of South Korea. Typhoon Maemi's center passed just
  east of the island with much of the island in the eye. Seongsanpo,
  on the east side of Cheju, recorded the minimum pressure of 955.1 hPa
  at 0700 UTC. The station was in the eye with a MSW (10-min avg) of
  only around 30 kts. The airport on the north coastline of the island
  recorded winds of near typhoon strength at 60 kts. But Gosan on the
  western side of Cheju and in the western eyewall recorded a 10-min
  mean wind of 93 kts. At 0600 UTC JTWC was estimating the 1-min avg
  MSW at 105 kts. A 93-kt 10-min avg wind equates to a 1-min mean
  wind of 106 kts--very good agreement. The Gosan observation also was
  very close to NMCC's 0600 UTC 10-min avg MSW of 90 kts, but somewhat
  higher than JMA's estimate of 80 kts.

  F. Damage and Casualties
  ------------------------

     Typhoon Maemi was described as the most powerful storm of the
  century as it tore through South Korea, and press reports indicate that
  at least 85 people died in that nation. The Korean government deployed
  5600 soldiers to help rescue workers search for 25 missing persons and
  perform clean-up operations. A total of 25,000 people were forced
  from their homes and had to seek shelter in schools and public buildings.
  South Korea's largest port of Busan was badly affected by the storm--
  eleven container-lifting cranes, each weighing 900 tons each were
  toppled and 6 metre-long steel containers were scattered around the
  port.

    Typhoon Maemi made landfall at high tide, and 282 ships were beached
  and wrecked by large waves. At one beach a cruise ship converted into
  a floating hotel was flipped over onto its side--fortuitously it had
  been evacuated in time. At least 18 empty fishing vessels were capsized.
  The world's largest shipbuilder, Hyundai Heavy Industries, reported that
  giant waves threw a 200,000-ton offshore storage facility belonging to
  Exxon Mobile into a 37,000-ton petrochemicals carrier being built by
  Hyundai Mipo Dockyard for a German firm. Both were damaged.

     Vast areas of farmland, cities and rivers were flooded as up to 460 mm
  of rain fell. Up to 12,626 acres of farmland, including rice paddies
  and orchards, were flooded before the harvest, raising concerns that the
  price of rice--the country's staple food--might rise significantly.
  Widespread flooding also caused chaos on roads. The few cars that did
  venture out were buffeted by strong winds as they moved cautiously with
  headlights and hazard lights on. Many highway road signs were downed
  (some fell on vehicles), traffic signals were damaged, vehicles were
  seen floating down streets that were turned into raging torrents, and
  many roads were blocked or washed away by landslides. One landslide
  derailed an express train travelling from Seoul to Andong, injuring 28
  people. Navy divers were called in to search flooded areas for victims,
  and soldiers used buckets to scoop water from underground parking lots.

     Five of South Korea's nuclear power plants were shut down due to
  damage to main current transformers and power lines. Fortunately, no
  radiation leakages were reported. About 20 major factories in the
  cities of Ulsan and Onsan on the southeast coast, including two major
  oil refineries, were forced to temporarily halt operations. Electricity
  was cut to 1.4 million households, but power was soon restored to the
  majority of these. The power outage partially paralyzed telephone
  networks: both fixed-line and cellular networks were affected.

     Typhoon Maemi also passed through North Korea, but the extent of
  damage there is not known because the government has restricted the
  release of information.

  Editor's Note: An OCHA report on the ReliefWeb website, dated
  22 September 2003, indicated that as of that date the confirmed death
  toll from Maemi in South Korea had risen to 117 with 13 still missing.
  The total damage estimate from the storm was place at US$4.1 billion.
  About 5000 homes were destroyed with an additional 13,000 damaged.
  Additional articles can be found at the following URL:

     <http://www.reliefweb.int/w/rwb.nsf/vLND>

  (Report written by Kevin Boyle and Huang Chunliang)

  *************************************************************************

  NORTH INDIAN OCEAN (NIO) - Bay of Bengal and Arabian Sea

  Activity for September: No tropical cyclones

  *************************************************************************

  SOUTHWEST INDIAN OCEAN (SWI) - South Indian Ocean West of Longitude 90E

  Activity for September: 1 moderate tropical storm

           Southwest Indian Ocean Tropical Activity for September
           ------------------------------------------------------

     The tropical storm season in the Southwest Indian Ocean west of 90E
  got underway early with the formation of Tropical Storm Abaimba. Such
  early-season storms are unusual but not all that rare in this basin.
  JTWC initiated warnings on TC-01S on 29 September and upgraded the system
  to minimal tropical storm status the next day. The system intensified
  markedly on 1 October and was named Abaimba by the Meteorological Service
  of Mauritius. Tropical Storm Abaimba meandered around at a very low
  latitude several hundred miles west-northwest of Diego Garcia and had
  dissipated by 4 October.

     The report on Tropical Storm Abaimba will be included in Part 2 of
  the September summary.

  *************************************************************************

  NORTHWEST AUSTRALIA/SOUTHEAST INDIAN OCEAN (AUW) - From 90E to 135E

  Activity for September: No tropical cyclones

  *************************************************************************

  NORTHEAST AUSTRALIA/CORAL SEA (AUE) - From 135E to 160E

  Activity for September: No tropical cyclones

  *************************************************************************

  SOUTH PACIFIC (SPA) - South Pacific Ocean East of Longitude 160E

  Activity for September: No tropical cyclones

  *************************************************************************

                              EXTRA FEATURE

     In order to shorten the amount of typing in preparing the narrative
  material, I have been in the habit of freely using abbreviations and
  acronyms. I have tried to define most of these with the first usage
  in a given summary, but I may have missed one now and then. Most of
  these are probably understood by a majority of readers but perhaps a
  few aren't clear to some. To remedy this I developed a Glossary of
  Abbreviations and Acronyms which I first included in the July, 1998
  summary. I don't normally include the Glossary in most months in
  order to help keep them from being too long. If anyone would like to
  receive a copy of the Glossary, please e-mail me and I'll be happy
  to send them a copy.

  *************************************************************************

  AUTHOR'S NOTE: This summary should be considered a very preliminary
  overview of the tropical cyclones that occur in each month. The cyclone
  tracks (provided separately) will generally be based upon operational
  warnings issued by the various tropical cyclone warning centers. The
  information contained therein may differ somewhat from the tracking and
  intensity information obtained from a "best-track" file which is based
  on a detailed post-seasonal analysis of all available data. Information
  on where to find official "best-track" files from the various warning
  centers will be passed along from time to time.

    The track files are not being sent via e-mail. They can be retrieved
  from the archive sites listed below. (Note: I do have a limited e-mail
  distribution list for the track files. If anyone wishes to receive
  these via e-mail, please send me a message.)

    Both the summaries and the track files are standard text files
  created in DOS editor. Download to disk and use a viewer such as
  Notepad or DOS editor to view the files.

     The first summary in this series covered the month of October,
  1997. Back issues can be obtained from the following websites
  (courtesy of Michael Bath, Michael V. Padua, Michael Pitt, and
  Chris Landsea):

    <http://australiasevereweather.com/cyclones/>
    <http://www.typhoon2000.ph>
    <http://mpittweather.com>
    <ftp://ftp.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/pub/landsea/padgett/>

     Another website where much information about tropical cyclones may
  be found is the website for the UK Meteorological Office. Their site
  contains a lot of statistical information about tropical cyclones
  globally on a monthly basis. The URL is:

    <http://www.met-office.gov.uk/sec2/sec2cyclone/sec2cyclone.html>

                    TROPICAL CYCLONE REPORTS AVAILABLE

     JTWC now has available on its website the complete Annual Tropical
  Cyclone Report (ATCR) for 2002 (2001-2002 season for the Southern
  Hemisphere). ATCRs for earlier years are available also.

     The URL is: <http://199.10.200.33/jtwc.html>

     Also, TPC/NHC has available on its webpage nice "technicolor"
  tracking charts for the 2002 Atlantic and Eastern North Pacific
  tropical cyclones; also, storm reports for all the 2002 Atlantic
  and Eastern North Pacific cyclones are now available, as well as
  track charts and reports on storms from earlier years.

     The URL is: <http://www.nhc.noaa.gov>

     A special thanks to Michael Bath of McLeans Ridges, New South Wales,
  Australia, for assisting me with proofreading the summaries.

  PREPARED BY

  Gary Padgett
  E-mail: garyp@alaweb.com
  Phone: 334-222-5327

  Kevin Boyle (Eastern Atlantic, Western Northwest Pacific, South
                China Sea)
  E-mail: newchapelobservatory@btinternet.com

  Huang Chunliang: (Assistance with Western Northwest Pacific, South
                    China Sea)
  E-mail: huangchunliang@hotmail.com

  Simon Clarke (Northeast Australia/Coral Sea, South Pacific)
  E-mail: saclarke@iprimus.com.au

  *************************************************************************
  *************************************************************************

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