1978 Pacific hurricane season

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1978 Pacific hurricane season
First storm formed: May 30, 1978
Last storm dissipated: October 21, 1978
Strongest storm: Fico and Norman - 120 knots
Total storms: 19
Major storms (Cat. 3+): 7
Total damage: unknown
Total fatalities: unknown
Pacific hurricane seasons
1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980

The 1978 Pacific hurricane season officially began May 15, 1978, in the eastern Pacific, June 1, 1978 in the central Pacific, and officially ended 30 November 1978. These dates conventionally delimit the period of time when tropical cyclones form in the eastern north Pacific Ocean.

Activity this year was slightly above average, with eighteen named storms forming. Five of those were tropical storms, thirteen were hurricanes, and six were major hurricanes that reached Category 3 or higher on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale. In the Central Pacific, a tropical depression and a major hurricane formed.

Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale
TD TS 1 2 3 4 5

Contents

[edit] Storms

[edit] Hurricane Aletta

Aletta made landfall in western Mexico as a tropical storm on May 31.

[edit] Hurricane Fico

Main article: Hurricane Fico
Storm path
Storm path

Fico was a powerful Category 4 storm. Although it never made landfall, it pounded the Big Island with huge waves, doing "significant damage". Fico was also, at the time, one of the most far-travelling Pacific hurricanes.

[edit] Hurricane Iva

Iva's scattered remnants caused rain on the islands of Hawaii and Maui.

[edit] Hurricane Miriam

Miriam threatened the Hawaiian Islands as a tropical storm, but veered south. Miriam had no effect on the islands. The storm dissipated September 2.

[edit] Hurricane Norman

Hurricane Norman on September 1.
Hurricane Norman on September 1.

Norman was powerful Category 4 hurricane. It had no effect on land while a hurricane. After weakening to a tropical storm, Norman recurved and headed straight for southern California. Norman made landfall as a depression and had dissipated by September 7. Heavy rains fell across the Sierra Nevada range in California, with a maximum amount of 7.01 inches reported at Lodgepole.[1]

[edit] Hurricane Olivia

Main article: Hurricane Greta-Olivia

Hurricane Olivia was a continuation of Atlantic Hurricane Greta. The depression emerged from Central America and quickly restrengthened into Tropical Storm Olivia. The storm erratically changed course and headed straight north as a hurricane. Olivia made landfall near the Isthmus of Tehuantepec and dissipated on September 23.

[edit] Tropical Storm Paul

Paul brushed the southern tip of Baja California and made landfall in western Mexico.

[edit] Hurricane Rosa

As a tropical storm, Rosa came close to Baja California Sur but never made landfall.

[edit] Hurricane Susan

The only cyclone to develop in the central Pacific did so on October 18. Susan rapidly intensified into a Category 4 hurricane and one of the three strongest storms then known in the central Pacific. Initially heading on a course that aimed directly at the Big Island, Susan instead turned to the southeast and decayed rapidly due to wind shear.

[edit] Tropical Storm Sergio

Sergio dissipated before making landfall on the Pacific coast of Baja California.

[edit] Other storms

From August 7 to August 9, heavy thunderstorms associated with this depression spread across the Hawaiian Islands. The depression's winds never exceeded gale-force.

[edit] 1978 Storm Names

These names were used for storms forming in the eastern Pacific Ocean this year. This is the first time these names were used. Names not retired from this list were used in the 1982 season. At this time, lists were intended to be repeated every four years instead of six.

This is the first season to use lists with male and female names on it. It is also the first year of modern naming.

  • Aletta
  • Bud
  • Carlotta
  • Daniel
  • Emilia
  • Fico
  • Gilma
  • Hector
  • Iva
  • John
  • Kristy
  • Lane
  • Miriam
  • Norman
  • Olivia
  • Paul
  • Rosa
  • Sergio
  • Tara (unused)
  • Vicente (unused)
  • Willa (unused)

The central Pacific used names and numbers from the western Pacific's typhoon list. One name– Susan– was required.

[edit] Retirement

The World Meteorological Organization retired one name in the spring of 1979: Fico. It was replaced with Fabio.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links