Typhoon Zeb

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Typhoon Zeb
Category 5 typhoon (SSHS)
Typhoon Zeb making landfall

Typhoon Zeb making landfall
Formed October 9, 1998
Dissipated October 19, 1998
Highest
winds
285 km/h (180 mph) (1-minute sustained)
Lowest pressure 872 hPa (mbar)
Fatalities 99 direct
Damage $834.7 million (1998 USD)
$1.1 billion (2008 USD)
Areas
affected
Philippines, Taiwan, Japan
Part of the
1998 Pacific typhoon season

Typhoon Zeb (also known as Super Typhoon Zeb or Typhoon (Iliang) in the Philippines) was a very powerful Category 5 typhoon with a minimum central pressure reading of 872 millibars and 180 mph sustained winds, making it one of five Pacific storms tied for the second most intense tropical cyclone on record.

Contents

[edit] Storm history

Storm path
Storm path

Zeb formed out of a low pressure system that emerged from a monsoon trough. The low then became a tropical depression south of Guam.[1] On October 10, the system reached tropical storm strength and was named Zeb. Zeb then moved westward before reaching typhoon status northwest of Palau. Overnight, the storm explosively intensified from a 70 mph tropical storm to a 180 mph supertyphoon.[2] While maintaining its strength, Zeb made landfall on the island of Luzon. Zeb then turned a north-northwesterly course while weakening to a category 2 storm.

Zeb then later recurved and brushed past Taiwan before accelerating towards Japan on the 17th. Now downgraded to a tropical storm, Zeb struck the islands of Kyūshū and Shikoku before merging with a cold front on the 18th.[3] During its life it also absorbed Tropical Storm Alex.

[edit] Impact

83 people died in the Philippines and there was severe damage on the island of Luzon. About most of the rice harvest was ruined and the town of Baguio reported 994.6 mm of rain.[4] About six provinces were declared disaster areas. [5] In Taiwan, Zeb left 25-31 people dead and $56.7 million dollars (1998 USD) in damage when it brushed past Taiwan.[6] In its dissipating stage two people were killed on Okinawa Island and six more on mainland Japan. Most of them were from mudslides. The final death toll in Japan was twelve.[7]

The final death toll was 99 dead and $834 million dollars (1998 USD) in damage.

[edit] Strength Records

Zeb's 872 mbar pressure reading makes it the second most intense tropical cyclone on record worldwide, tied with Gay of 1992 and Ivan, Joan, and Keith of 1997, and behind Typhoon Tip of 1979.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Most intense tropical cyclones
Intensity is measured solely by central pressure
Rank Name Basin Season Min. pressure
1 Typhoon Tip Western Pacific 1979 870 mbar
2 Typhoon Gay Western Pacific 1992 872 mbar
Typhoon Ivan Western Pacific 1997 872 mbar
Typhoon Joan Western Pacific 1997 872 mbar
Typhoon Keith Western Pacific 1997 872 mbar
Typhoon Zeb Western Pacific 1998 872 mbar
7 Typhoon June Western Pacific 1975 875 mbar
8 Typhoon Ida Western Pacific 1958 877 mbar
Typhoon Nora Western Pacific 1973 877 mbar
Main article: list of tropical cyclones
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