List of named storms (R)
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Storms are named for historical reasons to avoid confusion when communicating with the public, as more than one storm can exist at a time. Names are drawn in order from predetermined lists. For tropical cyclones, names are assigned when a system has one-, three-, or ten-minute winds of more than 65 km/h (40 mph). Standards, however, vary from basin to basin. For example, some tropical depressions are named in the Western Pacific, while within the Australian and Southern Pacific regions, the naming of tropical cyclones are delayed until they have gale-force winds occurring more than halfway around the storm center.
- This list covers the letter R.
Storms
[edit]- 2016 – a weak tropical system that affected Vietnam.
- 2021† – a powerful Category 5-equivalent super typhoon that caused severe and widespread damage in the Southern Philippines.
- Raja (1986)† – was a tropical cyclone that holds the 24-hour rainfall record of 674.9 mm (26.57 in) for the French Overseas Territory of Wallis and Futuna.
- 2002 – a Category 3 typhoon that affected the Ryukyu Islands and Korea; also contributed to flooding in the Philippines.
- 2008 – a Category 4 typhoon that stayed out at sea.
- 2014† – a Category 5 super typhoon that impacted both the Philippines and South China, causing billions in damages.
- 1987 – a Category 4 major hurricane that remained at sea but generated torrential rains over Southern California.
- 2011 – a weak tropical storm that affected the Philippines.
- 2017 – a weak and short-lived tropical storm that stayed off the coast of southern Mexico.
- 2019 – a minimal typhoon that impacted northern Philippines.
- 2023 – late-season a weak tropical storm that formed at sea.
- Rananim (2002)† – a Category 2 typhoon that impacted East China, causing damages of up to US$2.4 billion.
- Raquel (2015) – the first tropical cyclone to exist within the South Pacific Ocean during the month of July on record; affected the Solomon Islands.
- Rashmi (2008) – a weak and short-lived tropical cyclone that impacted Bangladesh, killing 28 people.
- Ray (1975) – an early-season Australian severe tropical cyclone.
- 1983 – tied with Hurricane Kiko for the strongest tropical cyclone of the 1983 Pacific hurricane season.
- 1989 – the strongest tropical cyclone of the 1989 Pacific hurricane season.
- 2005 – a Category 1 tropical cyclone that made landfall on the northern coast of Australia.
- 2013 – the strongest tropical cyclone of the 2013 Pacific hurricane season.
- 2019 – short-lived tropical storm which dissipated without affecting land.
- Rebekah (2019) – a subtropical storm that only persisted in the central Atlantic Ocean.
- Remal (2024) – a moderately intense tropical cyclone which affected coastal Bangladesh and West Bengal.
- 1964 – not areas land.
- 1968 – a Category 1 typhoon that hit the Philippines and slightly sunk South Vietnam.
- 1972 – no ares land.
- 1976 – produced tremendous rainfall in Japan including, at the time, a national 24-hour record accumulation of 1,140 mm (44.8 in).
- 1980 – hit Taiwan.
- 1984 – one of the most intense tropical cyclones on record and the strongest storm of the 1984 season.
- 1988 – a weak tropical storm that hit the Philippines.
- 1992 – recurved away from land.
- 1996 – hit Philippines, Abel killed eight people, left seven others missing and caused $4.3 million.
- 2000 – killed 181 people in the Philippines and Taiwan.
- 2006† – an intense typhoon that killed at least 734 people in the Philippines and 98 people in Vietnam.
- Rena (1949) – a November tropical storm that affected the Philippines.
- 2010 – a Category 3 severe tropical cyclone that caused significant damage in Tonga and American Samoa.
- 2020 – a weak storm that formed east of Cape Verde and then moved out to sea, earliest seventeenth named storm in the Atlantic basin.
- Rening (1999) – a weak system that impacted Vietnam bringing torrential rainfall.
- Reuben (2015) – a weak tropical cyclone that brought heavy flooding in parts of Fiji.
- Rex (1998) – a Category 4 typhoon that stayed out at sea off Japan.
- 1986 – affected Perth bringing heavy rain.
- 1997† – a May Category 4 severe tropical cyclone that later affected Western Australia.
- Richard (2010) – a late-October Category 2 hurricane that impacted Central America.
- 1985 – strong category 4 hurricane, never a threat to land
- 1996 – minimal storm that stayed away from land
- 1997 – weak category 2 hurricane, made landfall in Mexico during November
- 2009 – powerful category 5 hurricane, one of the strongest to form during October and the third-most intense Pacific hurricane on record
- 2015 – weak tropical storm, never threatened land
- 2021 – strong category 2 hurricane, made landfall near Lázaro Cárdenas, Michoacán.
- Riley (2019) – a Category 3 severe tropical cyclone, causing minimal impacts in Northwestern Australia.
- 2011 – a powerful but small Category 3 hurricane that made landfall in the Yucatán Peninsula.
- 2017 – a tropical storm that formed in the Central Atlantic.
- 2023 – a weak storm which remained far from any land.
- 1948 –
- 1953 - hit China as a tropical storm
- 1958 - affected the Micronesian Islands; mostly stayed out at sea
- 1961 - stayed largely at sea with minor damage in Palau and the Mariana Islands
- 1963 - affected the Philippines, stayed out at sea
- 1964 –
- 1966 - stayed out at sea
- 1969 - short-lived system that stayed out at sea
- 1971 - caused flooding to Western Australia
- 1972 – the longest lasting Western Pacific tropical cyclone.
- 1975 – affected Japan and the Ryūkyū Islands.
- 1978 – one of the most intense tropical cyclones ever recorded, caused much damage in the Philippines.
- 2001 – a Category 1 tropical cyclone that remained far out in sea.
- 2005† – powerful Category 5 hurricane that caused extensive damage to Texas and Louisiana.
- 2019 – a November Category 3 severe tropical cyclone that affected the Solomon Islands.
- Ritang (1994) – a Category 5 super typhoon that affected East China and Taiwan.
- Roanu (2016) – a May tropical storm that affected Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.
- Robert (1977)† – a severe tropical cyclone that caused minor impacts in several South Pacific islands.
- 1975 – traversed much of the Indian Ocean.
- 1990 – a long-living tropical storm that caused minor impacts.
- 1993 – a Category 4 typhoon that affected Japan.
- 2010 – a tropical cyclone that stayed out in the central Indian Ocean.
- 1979 – a weak and disorganised tropical storm in the Western Pacific.
- 1982 – a December severe tropical storm that brushed the coast of eastern Philippines.
- 1986 – a Category 2 typhoon that brushed the southern coast of Japan.
- 1989 – a strong tropical storm produced significant rainfall across the majority of Japan, affecting areas from the Ryukyu Islands to Hokkaido.
- 1993† – a Category 2 tropical cyclone that affected New Caledonia.
- Rolf (2011) – an unusual Mediterranean tropical storm that brought flooding to Italy, France, Spain, and Switzerland in November 2011.
- 2004 – a Category 5 typhoon that impacted Japan.
- 2008 – affected the Philippines as a tropical depression
- 2020† – made landfall as a Category 5–equivalent super typhoon on Catanduanes in the Philippines and in Vietnam as a tropical storm.
- Ron (1998)† – the strongest tropical cyclone on record to impact Tonga.
- Rona (1999)† – throated Queensland as a minimal tropical cyclone, but later re-developed into Cyclone Frank.
- 1978 — threatened Baja California.
- 1979 — struck northern Australia.
- 1982 — brushed southwestern Mexico.
- 1994 — a Category 2 hurricane that killed at least 4 people in Mexico and widespread flooding in the U.S. state of Texas that killed 22 people and caused hundreds of millions of dollars in damage in October 1994.
- 2000 – made landfall in Mexico as a weak tropical storm, causing minimal damage.
- 2006 – never threatened land.
- 2012 – never threatened land.
- 2018 – widespread flooding to northwestern Mexico and the Southwestern United States in late September 2018, and was the first tropical cyclone to make landfall in Baja California since Nora in 1997.
- Rosal (2022) – remained out at sea but caused 8 indirect deaths in the Philippines.
- Rosalind (1947) – the first super typhoon ever recorded in the Northwest Pacific.
- 1948 – a Category 1 typhoon that hit the Philippines and South China.
- 1952 – a Category 1 typhoon that passed off the coast of Japan.
- 1957 – a powerful Category 4 typhoon that did not make landfall.
- 1960 – a weak tropical storm that was in the open sea.
- 1963 – approached the Philippines and struck Japan.
- 1965 (April) – passed west of Réunion.
- 1965 (August) – approached the Philippines and struck China.
- 1968 – struck the Philippines and Vietnam.
- 1971 – struck the Philippines and China.
- 1974 – approached Ryūkyū Islands.
- 1978 – struck Taiwan.
- 2021 – a rather weak tropical storm that stayed at sea.
- 1971† – made landfall as a Category 1 tropical cyclone.
- 1997 – a Category 5 July super typhoon that affected Japan.
- 2008 – a Category 2 tropical cyclone that affected Christmas Island.
- 1963– became a Category 4-equivalent super typhoon but did not affect any land areas.
- 1967 – struck the Philippines.
- 1971 – struck the Philippines and China.
- 1975 – one of the most intense tropical cyclones on record, reaching 875 millibars.
- 1979 – a Category 3 typhoon that struck Japan and caused 12 deaths.
- 1983 – struck the Philippines and China.
- 1987 – struck the Philippines and Vietnam.
- 1991 – struck Japan and became the country's costliest typhoon ever.
- 1995† – a strong Category 5-equivalent typhoon that caused 882 fatalities and severe damage across the Philippines.
- 1990 – stayed out at sea.
- 2000† – an intense tropical cyclone that impacted Western Australia.
- 2018† – was an extremely powerful tropical cyclone that caused catastrophic destruction on the islands of Tinian and Saipan in the Northern Mariana Islands, and later impacted the Philippines.
- Roskas (2003)† – a Category 3 typhoon that did not affect any land.
- Roxanne (1995)† – a rare and erratic Category 3 hurricane that caused extensive flooding in Mexico.
- 1981 – churned over the South China Sea.
- 1984 – a weak tropical storm that affected the Mariana Islands.
- 1988† – the second-most intense January Pacific typhoon on record; caused widespread damage on Guam and Rota.
- 1965 – hit southern Japan as an intense typhoon, killing 28 people.
- 1969 – relatively strong typhoon that paralleled the Philippine and Japanese coasts but remained at sea.
- 1977 – short-lived system only recognized by PAGASA.
- 1981 – a strong typhoon which impacted northern Philippines and China, with a death toll of at least 141 people, majority of which from the capsizing of BRP Datu Kalantiaw.
- 1985 – a devastating typhoon which struck central Vietnam, resulting to 769 fatalities.
- 1989 – a powerful typhoon that was the first of three typhoons to severely affect northern Philippines within one month; caused significant damage 119 deaths.
- 1993 – a typhoon which brushed northern Philippines before making landfall in China.
- 1997 – one of the most intense Pacific typhoons to exist in December; originally formed in the Central Pacific and eventually affected the Marshall Islands, Guam and Northern Mariana Islands, causing extensive damage but ultimately zero fatalities.
- 1950 – a category 3 typhoon that passed off the coast of Japan.
- 1954 – hit the Philippines as a typhoon, and hit China as a tropical storm.
- 1959 – did not affect any major land masses.
- 1961 – tropical storm that hit the Philippines and Vietnam.
- 1964 – struck near Hong Kong.
- 1967 – tropical storm that had little effect on the Philippines.
- 1970 – tropical storm that affected the Philippines and China.
- 1972 – not a threat to land
- 1976 – struck the Philippines and approached Japan.
- 1982 – not areas land.
- 1985 – struck Japan.
- 1988 – affected the Philippines and Hainan Island.
- 2014† – struck the Philippines
- 2021 – a strong tropical cyclone that impacted New Caledonia with strong winds and rainfall, after its predecessor tropical low and a nearby trough caused disruption over some parts of the Solomon Islands.
- 1966 – affected Japan as a severe tropical storm.
- 1970 – a minor tropical depression.
- 1974 – affected Taiwan as a severe tropical storm.
- 1978 – affected southwestern Japan as a minimal typhoon.
- 1982 – a Category 2 typhoon that impacted the Philippines and South China.
- 1986 – a tropical storm that affected the Philippines and Vietnam.
- 1990† – a catastrophic typhoon that devastated the Philippines, killing more than 700 people.
- Rusa (2002)† – mainly affected the Korean Peninsula, bringing damages of up to US$4 billion.
- 1990 – a Category 4 typhoon that affected Micronesia and Guam.
- 1994 – affected South China bringing torrential rainfall which caused billions of damages.
- Rusty (2013)† – a Category 4 severe tropical cyclone that produced record duration gale-force winds in Port Hedland, Western Australia in late February 2013.
- 1945 – struck Japan
- 1951 – Category 4 typhoon, struck Japan killing 572 people and injuring another 2,644
- 1955 – Category 5 super typhoon, churned in the open ocean
- 1959 – far northeast of the Philippines
- 1962 – Category 5-equivalent super typhoon, remained east of Japan
- 1965 – remained out at sea
- 1967 – Category 3-equivalent typhoon, remained east of Japan
- 1970 – passed just south of Cape Cà Mau; also known as Aning within the PAR
- 1973 – Category 2-equivalent typhoon, crossed Luzon, Philippines, then hit Hainan Island, China and then Northeast Vietnam; also known as Narsing within the PAR
- 1977 – hit China; also known as Kuring within the PAR
- 1980 (February) – remained east of Queensland
- 1980 (September) – crossed Hainan Island before hitting northern Vietnam
- 1983 – dissipated east of the Philippines due to strong wind shear; also known as Ading within the PAR
- 1987 – caused severe damage in South China
- 1991 – Category 5 super typhoon, made landfall on northern Luzon with winds of 115 mph (185 km/h); also known as Trining within the PAR
- 1994 – short-lived storm, east of Japan
- 1992 – a Category 4 typhoon that passed eastern Japan.
- 1995 – a very strong typhoon which affected the Philippines, Taiwan and Japan but only caused 5 fatalities and minimal damage.
See also
[edit]- European windstorm names
- Atlantic hurricane season
- List of Pacific hurricane seasons
- Tropical cyclone naming
- South Atlantic tropical cyclone
- Tropical cyclone
References
[edit]- General
- [1]
- [2]
- 61st IHC action items (PDF) (Report). Office of the Federal Coordinator for Meteorology. November 29, 2007. pp. 5–7. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 13, 2004. Retrieved April 13, 2015.
- Padua, Michael V (June 11, 2008). "1945–1997 JTWC names for the Western Pacific Ocean and South China Sea". Typhoon 2000. Retrieved October 11, 2009.
- Padgett, Gary (1999). "A review of the 1998 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- Padgett, Gary (2000). "A review of the 1999 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- Padgett, Gary (2001). "A review of the 2000 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- Padgett, Gary (2002). "A review of the 2001 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- Padgett, Gary (2003). "A review of the 2002 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- Padgett, Gary (2004). "A review of the 2003 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- Padgett, Gary (2005). "A review of the 2004 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- Padgett, Gary (2006). "A review of the 2005 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- Padgett, Gary (2007). "A review of the 2006 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- Padgett, Gary (November 3, 2008). "A review of the 2007 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- Padgett, Gary (February 11, 2009). "A review of the 2008 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- Padgett, Gary (May 3, 2010). "A review of the 2009 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- Padgett, Gary (2011). "A review of the 2010 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- Young, Steve (2011). "A review of the 2011 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- Young, Steve (2011). "A review of the 2012 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- Young, Steve (2014). "A review of the 2013 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- Young, Steve (2015). "A review of the 2014 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved January 28, 2015.
- Young, Steve (2016). "A review of the 2015 tropical cyclone season for the Northern Hemisphere". Australian Severe Weather. Retrieved July 19, 2016.
- Padua, Michael V (November 6, 2008). "PAGASA Tropical Cyclone Names 1963–1988". Typhoon 2000. Archived from the original on August 27, 2015. Retrieved May 27, 2014.
- Unattributed (November 9, 2004). "Destructive Typhoons 1970–2003 (101–120)". National Disaster Coordinating Council. Archived from the original on November 9, 2004. Retrieved December 19, 2009.
- Staff Writer (2008). "Tropical Cyclone Information for the Australian region". Bureau of Meteorology. Retrieved May 27, 2014.
- [3]
- ^ "Atlantic hurricane best track (HURDAT version 2)" (Database). United States National Hurricane Center. April 5, 2023. Retrieved November 8, 2024. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- ^ National Hurricane Center; Hurricane Research Division; Central Pacific Hurricane Center (April 26, 2024). "The Northeast and North Central Pacific hurricane database 1949–2023". United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Weather Service. Archived from the original on May 29, 2024. A guide on how to read the database is available here. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- ^ MetService (May 22, 2009). "TCWC Wellington Best Track Data 1967–2006". International Best Track Archive for Climate Stewardship.[permanent dead link]