Английская Википедия:1960s South Pacific cyclone seasons
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The following is a list of all reported tropical cyclones within the South Pacific Ocean to the east of 160°E during the 1960s.
Systems
1959–60
- December 28, 1959 – January 4, 1960 – Tropical Cyclone Brigette.[1]
- January 2–4, 1960 – A possible tropical cyclone named Delilah existed to the west of Fiji.[1]
- January 15–20, 1960 – Tropical Cyclone Corine.[1]
- January 17–19, 1960 – A tropical cyclone impacted northern and central Tonga.[2]
- March 17–23, 1960 – Tropical Cyclone Flora.[1]
- April 2–10, 1960 – Tropical Cyclone Gina.[1]
1960–61
- January 9–14, 1961 – Tropical Cyclone Barberine existed near New Caledonia's Loyalty Islands, where it had a minor impact on the islands.[1][3]
- February 3–11, 1961 – Tropical Cyclone Catherine.[1]
- March 3–12, 1961 – A possible tropical cyclone impacted Tuvalu, Samoa and the Northern Cook Islands.[1]
- March 12–19, 1961 – A tropical cyclone impacted the Northern Cook Islands and French Polynesia's Society Islands. It is thought that this system might have been two separate tropical cyclones rather than one.[1]
- March 14–19, 1961 – A tropical cyclone impacted central and southern Tonga.[2]
- March 15–21, 1961 – Tropical Cyclone Isis.[1]
1961–62
- November 29 – December 8, 1961 – Tropical Cyclone Alizor developed about Шаблон:Convert to the southwest of Honiara in the Solomon Islands.[4][5] Over the next few days, the system moved south-eastwards and passed around Шаблон:Convert to the west of Koumac in northern New Caledonia during December 2.[4][5] The system subsequently continued to move south-eastwards and impacted Norfolk Island, before it was last noted during December 10, while located to the northwest of New Zealand.[5][6] Alizor caused heavy rain, minor damage, river flooding and disrupted telephone communications in New Caledonia.[1][4][5]
- February 8–13, 1962 – A tropical depression moved from Vanuatu to the south of Fiji and possibly became a tropical cyclone.[1][6]
- February 13–17, 1962 – During February 13, a tropical cyclone formed to the northwest of Palmerston Island and moved eastwards towards Aitutaki, where gale-force winds were reported.[1][7] The system subsequently moved southwards through the eastern Cook Islands, before it was last noted during February 17.[7] Within the Cook Islands, the system possibly produced hurricane-force winds over the islands, where considerable damage to houses and citrus plantations was reported on Mauke and Atiu.[7]
- February 14–17, 1962 – A tropical cyclone existed to the east of Vanuatu and moved south-eastwards without making landfall.[1]
- February 18–19, 1962 – A tropical cyclone was located to the southwest of Palmerston Island in the Cook Islands.[1]
- February 27 – March 2, 1962 – A tropical cyclone existed in between Vanuatu and New Caledonia's Loyalty Islands.[1]
- November 10–14, 1962 – A tropical cyclone existed near New Caledonia's Loyalty Islands and moved south-eastwards towards the Kermadic Islands.[1]
- December 22–25, 1962 – A tropical cyclone existed to the south of Samoa and moved south-eastwards to the south of the Cook Islands where it caused gale-force winds on Palmerston Island.[1]
- January 15–18, 1963 – A tropical cyclone moved through the islands of Vanuatu where it caused no significant damage.[1]
- January 18–21, 1963 – A possible tropical cyclone moved from Vanuatu to the south of Fiji.[1]
- January 29 – February 2, 1963 – A possible tropical cyclone existed in the Coral Sea to the north of New Caledonia.[1]
- February 16–20, 1963 – A tropical cyclone moved south-westwards within the Coral Sea, however, it did not make landfall on any island nation.[1]
- March 1–6, 1963 – A tropical cyclone existed within the Coral Sea and moved south-eastwards between Vanuatu and New Caledonia.[1]
- March 7–18, 1963 – A tropical cyclone impacted Tonga, Niue and the Southern Cook Islands.[1]
- April 1–6, 1963 – A tropical cyclone existed to the southeast of New Caledonia.[1]
- April 20–26, 1963 – A tropical cyclone existed within the Coral Sea to the southeast of New Guniea.[1]
1963–64
- November 15–25, 1963 – A tropical cyclone impacted Vanuatu.[1]
- December 15–23, 1963 – A tropical cyclone was observed over the north-eastern Coral Sea, as it moved through the Santa Cruz Islands before it moved southeastwards to the west of Fiji.[1]
- January 27 – February 2, 1964 – Tropical Cyclone Bertha.[1]
- February 19–25, 1964 – Tropical Cyclone Edith.[1]
- March 18–25, 1964 – One or two tropical cyclones existed to the east of Vanuatu and moved south-eastwards towards southern Fiji.[1]
- March 20, 1964 – A possible tropical cyclone possibly moved south-eastwards from New Caledonia to the south of Fiji.[1]
- March 28 – April 7, 1964 – Tropical Cyclone Henrietta.[1]
- June 13, 1964 – A tropical cyclone impacted the Samoan Islands, where 250 people were killed.[1]
1964–65
- November 19 – December 1, 1964 – During November 19, a tropical cyclone was identified near Rotuma, before a plane from the Royal New Zealand Air Force provided information on the system's position during the next day.[8] Over the next few days, the system moved south-eastwards and passed near Fiji's Vanua Levu and northern Lau Islands, causing minor damage to houses and coconut trees.[1] After impacting Fiji, the system appeared to perform a loop, before it moved eastwards between the Tongan islands of Tongatapu and Haʻapai.[8] After moving south of Niue, the system turned south-eastwards, before it was last noted during December 1.[1]
- December 5–8, 1964 – A small tropical cyclone developed to the northwest of Rotuma, before hurricane-force winds were reported on the island during December 5, as it passed just to the east of the Fijian dependency.[1] Over the next few days, the system moved south-westwards and impacted the Lau Islands, before it dissipated near Tonga during December 8.[1]
- December 18–22, 1964 – A tropical cyclone impacted Fiji.[1]
- January 14–16, 1965 – A possible tropical cyclone moved from Vanuatu to the south of Fiji.[1]
- February 4–12, 1965 – A tropical cyclone impacted Wallis and Futuna and Fiji.[1]
- February 18–19, 1965 – A possible tropical cyclone named Lucile impacted Vanuatu.[1]
- February 24–28, 1965 – A possible tropical cyclone named Olga existed to the east of New Caledonia.[1]
1965–66
- January 26 – February 6, 1966 – A tropical cyclone developed to the north of Fiji and later impacted Wallis and Futuna, Samoa and the Southern Cook Islands.[1][8]
- January 29–31, 1966 – A tropical cyclone caused gale-force winds on Palmerston Island and Aitutaki, as it moved through the Southern Cook Islands.[1]
- February 13, 1966 – A possible tropical cyclone was located to the east of Tokelau.[1]
- February 23 – March 2, 1966 – Tropical Cyclone Connie was located within the north-eastern Coral Sea and moved westwards, before it recurved south-eastwards to pass to the west of New Caledonia.[1]
- March 12–16, 1966 – A tropical cyclone moved southeastwards between Vanuatu and New Caledonia.[1]
- April 26–28, 1966 – A possible tropical cyclone existed to the west of French Polynesia's Society Islands and south of the Austral Islands.[1]
1966–67
- November 13–19, 1966 – Tropical Cyclone Angela impacted the Solomon Islands.[1]
- December 4–9, 1966 – A tropical cyclone moved south-eastwards over Viti Levu and the Lau Islands, where it caused some damage to banana trees and bures.[8]
- January 23–31, 1967 – Tropical Cyclone Dinah developed near the Solomon Islands, before it moved south-westwards into the Australian region.[1]
- February 1–8, 1967 – Tropical Cyclone Agnes developed to the east of northern Vanuatu and moved southeastwards between the island nation and New Caledonia.[1]
- February 18–22, 1967 – Tropical Cyclone Barbara.[1]
- February 23–27, 1967 – A possible tropical cyclone moved from Vanuatu to the south of Fiji.[1]
- March 16–17, 1967 – Tropical Cyclone Glenda.[1]
- April 7–14, 1967 – During April 7, a tropical cyclone developed to the northeast of Rotuma and moved southwards where it made landfall on Vanua Levu during April 9.[8] Over the next couple of days, the system moved south-southeastwards to the east of Suva, near the island of Matuku and to the west of Ono-I-Lau. Severe damage was reported.[8]
1967–68
- November 10–16, 1967 – Tropical Cyclone Annie.[9]
- December 12–20, 1967 – A tropical cyclone impacted Tokelau and the Cook Islands.[1]
- January 14–24, 1968 – Tropical Cyclone Brenda.[1]
- January 27–30, 1968 – A possible tropical cyclone developed within the Coral Sea and moved eastwards through Vanuatu.[1]
- February 7–13, 1968 – A tropical cyclone impacted Samoa and Niue.[1]
- February 20–24, 1968 – A tropical cyclone developed to the southeast of New Caledonia and moved southwards towards Norfolk Island.[1]
- March 1–5, 1968 – Tropical Cyclone Florence.[1]
- March 20–25, 1968 – A tropical cyclone existed to the south of Fiji.[1]
- April 5–10, 1968 – Tropical Cyclone Giselle.[1]
1968–69
- November 29–30, 1968 – A possible tropical cyclone between Niue and the Southern Cook Islands.[1]
- December 11–15, 1968 – Tropical Cyclone Becky.[1]
- January 11–17, 1969 – A tropical cyclone impacted Wallis and Futuna before impacting Tonga.[1]
- January 28 – February 5, 1969 – Tropical Cyclone Colleen.[1]
- February 12–16, 1969 – Tropical Cyclone Hortense.[1]
- February 17–21, 1969 – Tropical Cyclone Irene.[1]
- February 25–28, 1969 – A tropical cyclone developed to the north of Fiji and moved south-eastwards towards Tonga.[8]
- February 26 – March 2, 1969 – A possible tropical cyclone near the Solomon Islands to the east of Vanuatu.[1]
- April 26 – May 4, 1969 – Tropical Cyclone Esther.[1]
1969–70
- January 2–19, 1970 – Severe Tropical Cyclone Ada's precursor tropical depression performed a large clockwise loop, near the Solomon Islands before it ultimately made landfall on Queensland, Australia.[1]
- January 9, 1970 – An area of low pressure with three weak centres, existed between Fiji, Rotuma and Samoa. Two of these centres developed further and brought gale-force winds to Tokelau, Samoa and Tuvalu.[1]
- January 11–12, 1970 – A tropical depression brought gale-force winds to both Fiji and Tonga.[1][10]
- February 10–19, 1970 – Tropical Cyclone Dawn.[1]
- February 11–23, 1970 – Tropical Cyclone Dolly.[1]
- February 28 – March 2, 1970 – Tropical Cyclone Emma.[1]
- April 2–4, 1970 – Tropical Cyclone Fanny impacted Vanuatu and New Caledonia.[1]
- April 8–10, 1970 – Tropical Cyclone Gillian.[1]
- April 12–18, 1970 – Tropical Cyclone Helen.[1]
- April 13–19, 1970 – Tropical Cyclone Isa.[1]
See also
- South Pacific tropical cyclone
- Atlantic hurricane seasons: 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969
- Eastern Pacific hurricane seasons: 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969
- Western Pacific typhoon seasons: 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969
- North Indian Ocean cyclone seasons: 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969
References
External links
- ↑ 1,00 1,01 1,02 1,03 1,04 1,05 1,06 1,07 1,08 1,09 1,10 1,11 1,12 1,13 1,14 1,15 1,16 1,17 1,18 1,19 1,20 1,21 1,22 1,23 1,24 1,25 1,26 1,27 1,28 1,29 1,30 1,31 1,32 1,33 1,34 1,35 1,36 1,37 1,38 1,39 1,40 1,41 1,42 1,43 1,44 1,45 1,46 1,47 1,48 1,49 1,50 1,51 1,52 1,53 1,54 1,55 1,56 1,57 1,58 1,59 1,60 1,61 1,62 1,63 1,64 1,65 1,66 1,67 1,68 1,69 1,70 1,71 1,72 1,73 1,74 1,75 1,76 1,77 1,78 1,79 1,80 Шаблон:Cite book
- ↑ 2,0 2,1 Шаблон:Cite report
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ 4,0 4,1 4,2 Шаблон:Cite journal
- ↑ 5,0 5,1 5,2 5,3 Шаблон:Cite journal
- ↑ 6,0 6,1 Шаблон:Cite journal
- ↑ 7,0 7,1 7,2 Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ 8,0 8,1 8,2 8,3 8,4 8,5 8,6 Шаблон:Cite report
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite report
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- South Pacific cyclone seasons
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- Tropical cyclones in the Cook Islands
- Tropical cyclones in the Solomon Islands
- Tropical cyclones in New Caledonia
- Tropical cyclones in Wallis and Futuna
- Tropical cyclones in Tonga
- Tropical cyclones in Tuvalu
- Tropical cyclones in New Zealand
- Tropical cyclones in Niue
- Tropical cyclones in Tokelau
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