1975 Pacific Typhoon Season Article Index for
1975
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1975
 

Information About

1975 Pacific Typhoon Season




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 1975 Pacific Hurricane Season . Tropical Storms formed in the entire west pacific basin were assigned a name by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center . Tropical depressions in this basin have the "W" suffix added to their number. Tropical depressions that enter or form in the Philippine area of responsibility are assigned a name by the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical And Astronomical Services Administration or PAGASA. This can often result in the same storm having two names.




STORMS

25 tropical depressions formed this year in the Western Pacific, of which 20 became tropical storms. 14 storms reached typhoon intensity, of which 3 reached super typhoon strength.


Typhoon Lola

Lola was a very early typhoon. It made landfall on Mindanao as a minimal typhoon on January 24 and transvered the southern Philippines as a tropical storm. Lola crossed the South China Sea before stalling in the open sea and dissipating on January 28 . The typhoon caused 30 casualies from mudslides and heavy rain.


Super Typhoon Nina


Nina was a short-lived but rapidly-intensifying typhoon. After forming on July 30 , it struck Taiwan at super typhoon intensity. It stayed a typhoon during its passage over the island, causing 25 fatalties and widespread damage. It emerged into the Formosa Strait and weakened to a tropical storm. Nina headed inland. Its moisture interacted with a Cold Front , causing a huge amount of rainfall. The rainfall contributed to the bursting of the Banqiao Dam , causing the deaths of around 200,000 people.


Typhoon Phyllis

Phyllis struck the southern part of Japan on August 17 as a minimal typhoon, having weakened from a peak of 140 mph winds. Phyllis caused over 60 casualties, with landslides and flooding causing moderate to heavy damage.


Typhoon Rita

Rita formed August 17 and erratically headed north and affected the Ryukyu Islands . Rita then made landfall on Shikoku as a moderately strong Category 1 typhoon. It moved along the entire length of Japan, weakening to a depression. Rita strengthened back into a tropical storm over the Kuril Islands — an unusually northerly location— before dissipating on August 24 . At least 26 deaths can be attributed to this typhoon from the heavy flooding— the worst in 10 years.


Typhoon Flossie

Flossie struck the extreme southern part of China at Category 1 intensity. 44 people were lost from 2 frighters sinking.


Super Typhoon June

June was the strongest storm of the season, but had no effect on land. At the time, June was the strongest typhoon on record, with a minimum central pressure of 876 Millibar s and maximum sustained winds of 185 mph.


1975 STORM NAMES

Western North Pacific tropical cyclones were named by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center . The first storm of 1975 was named Lola and the final one was named June.


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