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Action of 8 June 1945: Japanese cruiser Ashigara was torpedoed and sunk in the Bangka Strait by the British submarine Trenchant with the loss of about 1,300 lives. U.S. Undersecretary of State Joseph Grew denied reports that Russia would be given Korea among other states in exchange for its entry into the Pacific war. [13]
June 1945 in the United Kingdom (1 C, 4 P) June 1945 in the United States (2 P) This page was last edited on 1 February 2025, at 06:16 (UTC). Text is available under ...
2nd September – World War II officially ends, and Britain is bankrupt; 20 September – Mohandas Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru demand that British troops leave India, in vain. 25 June – Muslim League and congress were invited to the Simla Conference; 29 November – Bajaj Auto comes into existence. All India Council for Technical Education is ...
A Blank in the Weather Map (空白の天気図, Kuhaku-no Tenki-zu) is a non-fiction book written by Japanese author Kunio Yanagida and published in Japan in 1975. The book is about the Hiroshima Meteorological Observatory in 1945. Hiroshima was fully destroyed in the Atomic Bombing on August 6, 1945.
The 1945 Pacific typhoon season was the first official season to be included in the West Pacific typhoon database. It was also the first season to name storms. It has no official bounds; it ran year-round in 1945, but most tropical cyclones tend to form in the northwestern Pacific Ocean between June and December.
On Thursday, New Delhi nearly ranked among the world's top 10 when it topped out at 109 degrees (43 C), about 5 degrees shy of the all-time record high temperature for April there, which is 114.1 ...
The years between 1940 and 1949 featured the 1940s North Indian Ocean cyclone seasons.Each season was an ongoing event in the annual cycle of tropical cyclone formation. . The North Indian tropical cyclone season has no bounds, but they tend to form between April and December, peaks in May and Novem
Christopher C. Burt, a weather historian writing for Weather Underground, believes that the 1913 Death Valley reading is "a myth", and is at least 2.2 or 2.8 °C (4 or 5 °F) too high. [13] Burt proposes that the highest reliably recorded temperature on Earth could still be at Death Valley, but is instead 54.0 °C (129.2 °F) recorded on 30 ...