Typhoon Vera (1959)
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Category 5 typhoon (SSHS) | ||
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Formed | September 21, 1959 | |
Dissipated | September 28, 1959 | |
Highest winds |
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Lowest pressure | 896 hPa (mbar) | |
Fatalities | 5,238 direct | |
Damage | $261 million (1959 USD) $1.93 billion (2008 USD) |
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Areas affected |
Japan | |
Part of the 1959 Pacific typhoon season |
Super Typhoon Vera (T5915/伊勢湾台風 in Japan) was the strongest typhoon to hit Japan in recorded history. With winds of 160 mph, Vera slammed into the southern coast of Japan, causing widespread damage and flooding, with over 5,000 dead. Japan Meteorological Agency gave a special name to Vera: "Isewan Typhoon".
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[edit] Storm history
A low pressure area between Guam and Chuuk slowly organized into a tropical storm on September 21. Named Vera, it intensified to a typhoon the next day as it tracked northwestward. On the 23rd, Vera rapidly intensified, reaching peak winds of 190 mph winds that day. The winds, measured by reconnaissance aircraft, are subject to dispute due to the unknown conversion factors. Regardless, the supertyphoon was very intense with a pressure of 896 mb.
Unlike most super typhoons, which weaken due to upwelling or other outside factors, Vera remained very strong, slowly weakening as it continued northward. Strong divergence aloft and continued warm water temperatures allowed Vera to remain the equivalent of a Category 5 on the Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale. On September 26, Vera struck the coast of Kansai, Japan with winds of 160 mph. The storm weakened over the Archipelago while rapidly moving the northeast, and re-emerged into the northern Pacific Ocean on the 27th as a minimal typhoon. It continued to the east, and became extratropical on the 28th.
Name | Number | Name in Japan |
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Marie | T5415 | Toyamaru Typhoon |
Ida | T5822 | Kanogawa Typhoon |
Sarah | T5914 | Miyakojima Typhoon |
Vera | T5915 | Isewan Typhoon |
Nancy | T6118 | 2nd Muroto Typhoon |
Cora | T6618 | 2nd Miyakojima Typhoon |
Della | T6816 | 3rd Miyakojima Typhoon |
Babe | T7709 | Okinoerabu Typhoon |
Japan Meteorological Agency gave a special name to Vera: "Isewan Typhoon".
[edit] Impact
Vera will likely be recorded as one of Japan's worst natural disasters. Heavy storm surge combined with flooding, as well as extreme winds, caused the deaths of 4,580 people with 658 missing. Vast areas of crops were destroyed, sea walls ruined, roads and railways greatly damaged, and overflown rivers contributed to a damage estimate of $261 million (1959 USD, $1.67 billion in 2005 USD). Over 32,000 people were injured, and 1,596,855 people were left homeless. The combination of the death toll and the great number of people left homeless contributed to large outbreaks of Dysentery, Gangrene, Tetanus, and other epidemics.