List of storms named Maria
Appearance
(Redirected from Tropical Storm Maria (disambiguation))
The name Maria has been used for eight tropical cyclones worldwide: three in the Atlantic Ocean and five in the Western Pacific Ocean.
Atlantic Ocean
[edit]- Hurricane Maria (2005) – a Category 3 hurricane that did not affect land as a tropical cyclone.
- Hurricane Maria (2011) – a Category 1 hurricane that formed in the eastern Atlantic and made landfall in Newfoundland, causing minor damage.
- Hurricane Maria (2017) – an extremely powerful hurricane that made landfall in Dominica at Category 5 intensity; later brushed through Saint Croix and the United States Virgin Islands before making landfall in Puerto Rico as a high-end Category 4 hurricane, where a humanitarian crisis occurred.
The name Maria was retired after the 2017 season because of the extensive damage and loss of life caused by the storm and was replaced with Margot for the 2023 season.
Pacific Ocean
[edit]- Tropical Storm Maria (2000) (T0013, 21W) – a severe tropical storm that made landfall in southern China.
- Typhoon Maria (2006) (T0607, 09W) – tracked just south and east of Japan; JTWC classified it as a tropical storm.
- Tropical Storm Maria (2012) (T1222, 23W) – a severe tropical storm that remained out at sea.
- Typhoon Maria (2018) (T1808, 10W, Gardo) – a Category 5-equivalent super typhoon which weakened before making landfall in eastern China.
- Tropical Storm Maria (2024) (T2405, 06W) – a severe tropical storm that made landfall in the Tōhoku region in Japan.
See also
[edit]- Storm (Stewart novel) – a book by George Rippey Stewart about an extratropical cyclone named Maria which helped lead to the naming of tropical cyclones worldwide.
- "They Call the Wind Marīa" – a song by Lerner and Loewe inspired by Stewart's novel and performed in the musical Paint Your Wagon.
Similar names that have also been used for tropical cyclones:
- List of storms named Marie – used in the Eastern Pacific Ocean and the Western Pacific Ocean.
- List of storms named Mary – also used in the Western Pacific Ocean.