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Severe Tropical Cyclone Ian was a category 4 tropical cyclone that formed on January 2, 2014, and dissipated to an extratropical cyclone on January 15, 2014. Areas affected by the tropical cyclone include Fiji and Tonga. In Tonga, Ian caused destruction in the Ha'apai islands, with severely injured and one fatality. [1]
Pages in category "Tropical cyclones in Tonga" ... Pre-1900 South Pacific cyclone seasons; 1900–1940 South Pacific cyclone seasons ... Cyclone Ian; J. Cyclone ...
Typhoon Ian (1987) (T8716, 16W) – a Category 3 typhoon that never affected land; Tropical Storm Ian (1996) (11W) – approached Japan; Japan Meteorological Agency analyzed it as a tropical depression, not as a tropical storm; Australian Region: Cyclone Ian (1982) – moved erratically off the coast of Western Australia before making landfall
Here’s the latest on Post Tropical Cyclone Ian. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
A post-tropical cyclone is different from both a tropical storm and a hurricane. Here’s what it means for those keeping an eye on Ian. Ian is now considered a post-tropical cyclone.
Ian left his mark in the Triangle with downed trees and thousands of power outages. Ian knocks out power, trees and more as storm damage in Triangle mounts Skip to main content
January 11 - Cyclone Ian strikes Tonga with damage to buildings reported. [1] January 13 - Tonga restores contact with the Ha'apai islands after Cyclone Ian passed through during the weekend, killing one person and significantly damaging structures. [2]
The deadliest tropical cyclone to have its name retired was Severe Tropical Cyclone Namu, which caused over 100 deaths, when it affected the Solomon Islands in May 1986. The most damaging system was Yasi which caused over US$2.5 billion in damage to Vanuatu, the Solomon Islands, and Australia in January and February 2011.