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1968–69 Australian region cyclone season


The 1968–69 Australian region cyclone season was an above-average tropical cyclone season, featuring 15 tropical lows, of which 12 of them are named. Amber was the only hurricane-strength tropical cyclone of the season, however, it did not affect any landmasses. It ran from 1 November 1968 to 30 April 1969, with the regional tropical cyclone operational plan defining a "tropical cyclone year" separately from a "tropical cyclone season", with the "tropical cyclone year" for this season lasting from 1 July 1968 to 30 June 1969.

1968–69 Australian region cyclone season
Season summary map
Seasonal boundaries
First system formed22 November 1968
Last system dissipated30 April 1969
Strongest storm
NameAudrey-Bonnie
 • Lowest pressure975 hPa (mbar)
Seasonal statistics
Tropical lows15
Tropical cyclones13
Severe tropical cyclones1
Total fatalitiesUnknown
Total damageUnknown
Related articles
Australian region tropical cyclone seasons
1966–67, 1967–68, 1968–69, 1969–70, 1970–71

Season summary edit

Tropical cyclone scales#Comparisons across basins

Systems edit

Tropical Cyclone Adele edit

Tropical storm (SSHWS)
  
DurationNovember 22 – November 29
Peak intensity65 km/h (40 mph) (1-min);
998 hPa (mbar)

On November 22, a tropical depression formed near Papua New Guinea and moved to the southwest. It failed to strengthen until the 27th of November when it briefly reached tropical storm status and was named Adele. The storm then weakened and dissipated the next day.

Tropical Cyclone Amber edit

Category 1 tropical cyclone (SSHWS)
   
DurationDecember 16 – December 22
Peak intensity130 km/h (80 mph) (1-min);
977 hPa (mbar)

On December 19, a tropical low developed to the southwest of Jakarta. It further strengthened to a tropical cyclone, earning the name Amber. It briefly reached Category 1-equivalent hurricane before weakening. It was last noted on December 22.

Tropical Cyclone Beatie edit

Tropical depression (SSHWS)
  
DurationDecember 19 – December 24
Peak intensity45 km/h (30 mph) (1-min);
1001 hPa (mbar)

Beati was a weak tropical cyclone that originated to the south of Java. It moved westward, passing to the south of Christmas Island. It remained weak until it dissipated on December 24.

Tropical Cyclone Bettina-Berthe edit

Tropical storm (SSHWS)
  
DurationDecember 26 – December 27 (Exited basin)
Peak intensity85 km/h (50 mph) (1-min);

A tropical low to the west of Cocos Islands strengthened to Tropical Cyclone Bettina. However, it exited the basin towards the South-West Indian Ocean basin, early the next day.

Tropical Cyclone Cheri edit

Tropical storm (SSHWS)
   
DurationDecember 27 – December 30
Peak intensity75 km/h (45 mph) (1-min);
995 hPa (mbar)

Cheri was first noted on December 27 forming to the west of Christmas Island. It briefly strengthened to a Category 1 tropical cyclone before it was last noted dissipating on December 30.

Tropical Cyclone Bridget edit

Tropical depression (SSHWS)
  
DurationJanuary 24 – January 26
Peak intensity45 km/h (30 mph) (1-min);
1002 hPa (mbar)

Another weak cyclone, Bridget was seen developing to the south of Papua New Guinea. It moved to the south before it was last noted to the north of Townsville.[1]

Tropical Cyclone Colleen edit

Tropical storm (SSHWS)
   
DurationJanuary 27 – February 5 (Exited basin)
(Out of basin on 28 January–4 February)
Peak intensity100 km/h (65 mph) (1-min);
984 hPa (mbar)

A tropical low was noted forming near the Solomon Islands on January 27. It failed to develop and moved into the South Pacific basin, where it was named Colleen before striking New Caledonia.[2] It entered the basin again on February 4; however, it wasn't renamed. It reexited the region, the next day, shortly before transitioning to an extratropical cyclone.

Tropical Cyclone Gladys edit

Tropical storm (SSHWS)
   
DurationFebruary 15 – February 20
Peak intensity95 km/h (60 mph) (1-min);
987 hPa (mbar)

Gladys formed over Western Australia, to the south-southwest of Derby. It moved offshore on the same day and moved to the west before it was last noted dissipating to the north-northwest of Exmouth.

Tropical Cyclone Irene edit

Tropical storm (SSHWS)
  
DurationFebruary 21 (Entered basin) – February 24
Peak intensity75 km/h (45 mph) (1-min);
990 hPa (mbar)

The weakening Irene from the South Pacific basin entered the region on February 21. The storm weakened as it executed a loop before it was last noted on February 24 to the east of Cairns.[3]

Tropical Cyclone Audrey-Bonnie edit

Tropical storm (SSHWS)
   
DurationMarch 1 – March 9
Peak intensity110 km/h (70 mph) (1-min);
975 hPa (mbar)

A tropical low developed to become Tropical Cyclone Audrey on March 1. However, it made landfall near Maningrida on March 3. It weakened inland as it moved southwestward; however, it regenerated to a tropical cyclone to the northwest of Broome, with the BoM renaming the system Bonnie. It weakened again as it moved further inland, and it was last noted on March 9.[4]

Tropical Cyclone Leonie edit

Tropical storm (SSHWS)
  
DurationApril 5 – April 6
Peak intensity65 km/h (40 mph) (1-min);
995 hPa (mbar)

Leonie developed to the north of Cocos Islands. Moving southward, the cyclone slowly weakened and transitioned to an extratropical storm before it was last noted inland, to the south of Jingalup.

Tropical Cyclone Esther edit

Tropical storm (SSHWS)
  
DurationApril 25 – April 30 (Exited basin)
Peak intensity85 km/h (50 mph) (1-min);
992 hPa (mbar)

The last named tropical cyclone of the season, Esther formed to the east of Port Moresby on April 25. The system then performed a loop before exiting the basin on April 30. Formed east of Papua New Guinea, executed a loop, and moved eastward into the South Pacific basin.

Other systems edit

A tropical depression formed on December 16 and later moved into the neighboring South-West Indian Ocean, becoming Cyclone Amber.

Tropical Cyclone Enid formed on the extreme western portion of the basin on an unknown date; it later moved on the South-West Indian Ocean basin and was renamed Fanny.

There were two storms in April that exited off the northeast coast of Australia. The first one developed on April 8 to the southwest of Honiara, Solomon Islands. It moved to the northwest, then turned to the southwest, before it was last noted on April 15, midway between Queensland and New Caledonia. The second one formed on April 11 near the island nation and was last seen to the south-southwest of Brisbane on April 16.

Season effects edit

1968–69 Australian region cyclone season
Name Dates Peak intensity Areas affected Damage
(US$)
Deaths
Category Wind speed
(km/h (mph))
Pressure
(hPa)
Adele 22–29 Nov Category 1 tropical cyclone 65 (40) 998 None None 0
Amber 16–22 Dec Category 3 severe tropical cyclone 130 (80) 977 None None 0
Beatie 19–24 Dec Category 1 tropical cyclone 65 (40) 1001 Christmas Island None 0
Bettina 26–27 Dec Category 1 tropical cyclone 75 (45) Not specified None None 0
Cheri 27–30 Dec Category 1 tropical cyclone 85 (50) 995 None None 0
Bridget 24–26 Jan Category 1 tropical cyclone 65 (40) 1002 Queensland None 0
Colleen 27 Jan – 5 Feb Category 2 tropical cyclone 100 (65) 984 Solomon Islands, New Caledonia, New Zealand Unknown Unknown
Enid 5–6 Feb Category 1 tropical cyclone 65 (40) 984 None None 0
Gladys 15–20 Feb Category 2 tropical cyclone 95 (60) 987 Western Australia Unknown Unknown
Irene 21–24 Feb Category 1 tropical cyclone 75 (45) 990 None None 0
Audrey-Bonnie 1–9 Mar Category 2 tropical cyclone 110 (70) 975 Western Australia, Northern Territory Unknown Unknown
Leonie 5–6 Apr Category 1 tropical cyclone 75 (45) 995 Western Australia Unknown Unknown
Unspecified 8–15 Apr Tropical low 45 (30) Unspecified None None 0
Unspecified 11–16 Apr Tropical low 45 (30) Unspecified None None 0
Esther 25–30 Apr Category 1 tropical cyclone 65 (40) 996 Solomon Islands, Papua New Guinea None 0
Season aggregates
15 systems 22 Nov – 30 Apr 130 (80) 975 Unknown Unknown

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Tropical cyclones in the northeastern Australian region - 1960/61 season" (PDF). Australian Meteorological Magazine. 24: 50–75. 1959. (PDF) from the original on August 4, 2019. Retrieved April 24, 2020.
  2. ^ d'Aubert, AnaMaria; Nunn, Patrick D (March 2012). "Database 1: Tropical Cyclones (1558  – 1970)". Furious Winds and Parched Islands: Tropical Cyclones (1558–1970) and Droughts (1722–1987) in the Pacific. pp. 58–171. ISBN 978-1-4691-7008-4.
  3. ^ Kerr, Ian S (March 1, 1976). Tropical Storms and Hurricanes in the Southwest Pacific: November 1939 to May 1969 (PDF) (Report). pp. 23–28. Archived (PDF) from the original on August 11, 2013. Retrieved August 11, 2013.
  4. ^ Callaghan, Jeff (12 August 2004). Known Tropical Cyclone Impacts in the Gulf of Carpentaria (PDF). Australian Severe Weather (Report). Archived (PDF) from the original on 31 October 2012. Retrieved April 23, 2020.

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This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is Inconsistent as to what season this is about Please help improve this article if you can February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The 1968 69 Australian region cyclone season was an above average tropical cyclone season featuring 15 tropical lows of which 12 of them are named Amber was the only hurricane strength tropical cyclone of the season however it did not affect any landmasses It ran from 1 November 1968 to 30 April 1969 with the regional tropical cyclone operational plan defining a tropical cyclone year separately from a tropical cyclone season with the tropical cyclone year for this season lasting from 1 July 1968 to 30 June 1969 1968 69 Australian region cyclone seasonSeason summary mapSeasonal boundariesFirst system formed22 November 1968Last system dissipated30 April 1969Strongest stormNameAudrey Bonnie Lowest pressure975 hPa mbar Seasonal statisticsTropical lows15Tropical cyclones13Severe tropical cyclones1Total fatalitiesUnknownTotal damageUnknownRelated articles1968 69 South Pacific cyclone season 1968 69 South West Indian Ocean cyclone seasonAustralian region tropical cyclone seasons1966 67 1967 68 1968 69 1969 70 1970 71 Contents 1 Season summary 2 Systems 2 1 Tropical Cyclone Adele 2 2 Tropical Cyclone Amber 2 3 Tropical Cyclone Beatie 2 4 Tropical Cyclone Bettina Berthe 2 5 Tropical Cyclone Cheri 2 6 Tropical Cyclone Bridget 2 7 Tropical Cyclone Colleen 2 8 Tropical Cyclone Gladys 2 9 Tropical Cyclone Irene 2 10 Tropical Cyclone Audrey Bonnie 2 11 Tropical Cyclone Leonie 2 12 Tropical Cyclone Esther 2 13 Other systems 3 Season effects 4 See also 5 ReferencesSeason summary editSystems editTropical Cyclone Adele edit Tropical storm SSHWS nbsp DurationNovember 22 November 29Peak intensity65 km h 40 mph 1 min 998 hPa mbar On November 22 a tropical depression formed near Papua New Guinea and moved to the southwest It failed to strengthen until the 27th of November when it briefly reached tropical storm status and was named Adele The storm then weakened and dissipated the next day Tropical Cyclone Amber edit Category 1 tropical cyclone SSHWS nbsp nbsp DurationDecember 16 December 22Peak intensity130 km h 80 mph 1 min 977 hPa mbar On December 19 a tropical low developed to the southwest of Jakarta It further strengthened to a tropical cyclone earning the name Amber It briefly reached Category 1 equivalent hurricane before weakening It was last noted on December 22 Tropical Cyclone Beatie edit Tropical depression SSHWS nbsp DurationDecember 19 December 24Peak intensity45 km h 30 mph 1 min 1001 hPa mbar Beati was a weak tropical cyclone that originated to the south of Java It moved westward passing to the south of Christmas Island It remained weak until it dissipated on December 24 Tropical Cyclone Bettina Berthe edit Tropical storm SSHWS nbsp DurationDecember 26 December 27 Exited basin Peak intensity85 km h 50 mph 1 min A tropical low to the west of Cocos Islands strengthened to Tropical Cyclone Bettina However it exited the basin towards the South West Indian Ocean basin early the next day Tropical Cyclone Cheri edit Tropical storm SSHWS nbsp nbsp DurationDecember 27 December 30Peak intensity75 km h 45 mph 1 min 995 hPa mbar Cheri was first noted on December 27 forming to the west of Christmas Island It briefly strengthened to a Category 1 tropical cyclone before it was last noted dissipating on December 30 Tropical Cyclone Bridget edit Tropical depression SSHWS nbsp DurationJanuary 24 January 26Peak intensity45 km h 30 mph 1 min 1002 hPa mbar Another weak cyclone Bridget was seen developing to the south of Papua New Guinea It moved to the south before it was last noted to the north of Townsville 1 Tropical Cyclone Colleen edit Tropical storm SSHWS nbsp nbsp DurationJanuary 27 February 5 Exited basin Out of basin on 28 January 4 February Peak intensity100 km h 65 mph 1 min 984 hPa mbar A tropical low was noted forming near the Solomon Islands on January 27 It failed to develop and moved into the South Pacific basin where it was named Colleen before striking New Caledonia 2 It entered the basin again on February 4 however it wasn t renamed It reexited the region the next day shortly before transitioning to an extratropical cyclone Tropical Cyclone Gladys edit Tropical storm SSHWS nbsp nbsp DurationFebruary 15 February 20Peak intensity95 km h 60 mph 1 min 987 hPa mbar Gladys formed over Western Australia to the south southwest of Derby It moved offshore on the same day and moved to the west before it was last noted dissipating to the north northwest of Exmouth Tropical Cyclone Irene edit Tropical storm SSHWS nbsp DurationFebruary 21 Entered basin February 24Peak intensity75 km h 45 mph 1 min 990 hPa mbar The weakening Irene from the South Pacific basin entered the region on February 21 The storm weakened as it executed a loop before it was last noted on February 24 to the east of Cairns 3 Tropical Cyclone Audrey Bonnie edit Tropical storm SSHWS nbsp nbsp DurationMarch 1 March 9Peak intensity110 km h 70 mph 1 min 975 hPa mbar A tropical low developed to become Tropical Cyclone Audrey on March 1 However it made landfall near Maningrida on March 3 It weakened inland as it moved southwestward however it regenerated to a tropical cyclone to the northwest of Broome with the BoM renaming the system Bonnie It weakened again as it moved further inland and it was last noted on March 9 4 Tropical Cyclone Leonie edit Tropical storm SSHWS nbsp DurationApril 5 April 6Peak intensity65 km h 40 mph 1 min 995 hPa mbar Leonie developed to the north of Cocos Islands Moving southward the cyclone slowly weakened and transitioned to an extratropical storm before it was last noted inland to the south of Jingalup Tropical Cyclone Esther edit Tropical storm SSHWS nbsp DurationApril 25 April 30 Exited basin Peak intensity85 km h 50 mph 1 min 992 hPa mbar The last named tropical cyclone of the season Esther formed to the east of Port Moresby on April 25 The system then performed a loop before exiting the basin on April 30 Formed east of Papua New Guinea executed a loop and moved eastward into the South Pacific basin Other systems edit A tropical depression formed on December 16 and later moved into the neighboring South West Indian Ocean becoming Cyclone Amber Tropical Cyclone Enid formed on the extreme western portion of the basin on an unknown date it later moved on the South West Indian Ocean basin and was renamed Fanny There were two storms in April that exited off the northeast coast of Australia The first one developed on April 8 to the southwest of Honiara Solomon Islands It moved to the northwest then turned to the southwest before it was last noted on April 15 midway between Queensland and New Caledonia The second one formed on April 11 near the island nation and was last seen to the south southwest of Brisbane on April 16 Season effects edit1968 69 Australian region cyclone season Name Dates Peak intensity Areas affected Damage US DeathsCategory Wind speed km h mph Pressure hPa Adele 22 29 Nov Category 1 tropical cyclone 65 40 998 None None 0Amber 16 22 Dec Category 3 severe tropical cyclone 130 80 977 None None 0Beatie 19 24 Dec Category 1 tropical cyclone 65 40 1001 Christmas Island None 0Bettina 26 27 Dec Category 1 tropical cyclone 75 45 Not specified None None 0Cheri 27 30 Dec Category 1 tropical cyclone 85 50 995 None None 0Bridget 24 26 Jan Category 1 tropical cyclone 65 40 1002 Queensland None 0Colleen 27 Jan 5 Feb Category 2 tropical cyclone 100 65 984 Solomon Islands New Caledonia New Zealand Unknown UnknownEnid 5 6 Feb Category 1 tropical cyclone 65 40 984 None None 0Gladys 15 20 Feb Category 2 tropical cyclone 95 60 987 Western Australia Unknown UnknownIrene 21 24 Feb Category 1 tropical cyclone 75 45 990 None None 0Audrey Bonnie 1 9 Mar Category 2 tropical cyclone 110 70 975 Western Australia Northern Territory Unknown UnknownLeonie 5 6 Apr Category 1 tropical cyclone 75 45 995 Western Australia Unknown UnknownUnspecified 8 15 Apr Tropical low 45 30 Unspecified None None 0Unspecified 11 16 Apr Tropical low 45 30 Unspecified None None 0Esther 25 30 Apr Category 1 tropical cyclone 65 40 996 Solomon Islands Papua New Guinea None 0Season aggregates15 systems 22 Nov 30 Apr 130 80 975 Unknown UnknownSee also edit nbsp Tropical cyclones portalAustralian region tropical cyclone List of Southern Hemisphere tropical cyclone seasons Atlantic hurricane seasons 1968 1969 Eastern Pacific hurricane seasons 1968 1969 Western Pacific typhoon seasons 1968 1969 North Indian Ocean cyclone seasons 1968 1969 1968 69 South West Indian Ocean cyclone season 1968 69 South Pacific cyclone seasonReferences edit Tropical cyclones in the northeastern Australian region 1960 61 season PDF Australian Meteorological Magazine 24 50 75 1959 Archived PDF from the original on August 4 2019 Retrieved April 24 2020 d Aubert AnaMaria Nunn Patrick D March 2012 Database 1 Tropical Cyclones 1558 1970 Furious Winds and Parched Islands Tropical Cyclones 1558 1970 and Droughts 1722 1987 in the Pacific pp 58 171 ISBN 978 1 4691 7008 4 Kerr Ian S March 1 1976 Tropical Storms and Hurricanes in the Southwest Pacific November 1939 to May 1969 PDF Report pp 23 28 Archived PDF from the original on August 11 2013 Retrieved August 11 2013 Callaghan Jeff 12 August 2004 Known Tropical Cyclone Impacts in the Gulf of Carpentaria PDF Australian Severe Weather Report Archived PDF from the original on 31 October 2012 Retrieved April 23 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1968 69 Australian region cyclone season amp oldid 1201877145 Other systems, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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