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  2. 2024–2025 floods in Southeast Asia and South Asia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024–2025_floods_in...

    In Thailand, late November flooding disaster impacted over 135,000 households, prompting extensive emergency response efforts in both nations. Thailand's southern regions recorded rainfall exceeding 90 millimetres within a 24-hour period. [1] The extensive flooding resulted in one fatality and the displacement of over 2,700 people. [36]

  3. The weather station is located near Phitsanulok airport. But both the Royal Thai Air Force and civil aviation use their own weather station for the pilots' briefing. In the northern region just five stations have a weather radar with a radius of 120 km or 240 km, they are station Chiang Rai, Lamphun, Phitsanulok, Phetchabun and Tha Wang Pha. [2]

  4. Thai Meteorological Department - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thai_Meteorological_Department

    In 1905 the science of meteorology was first introduced to Thailand by the Royal Thai Navy which included meteorology in its navigation course. Seven years later, in 1912, the first meteorological textbook in Thai was published. Thailand’s first meteorological service, known as the Meteorological and Statistics Section, was established in 1923.

  5. Thailand notches highest temperature on record as 'monster ...

    www.aol.com/weather/thailand-notches-highest...

    A multiweek heat wave impacting southeastern Asia has shattered all-time records, prompted school closures and killed at least 13 people, according to officials. Temperatures in parts of ...

  6. 2014–2015 floods in Southeast Asia and South Asia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2014–2015_floods_in...

    As of 30 December, 15 people have been killed in the flooding. [12] [21] On 26 December, rains in Narathiwat and Pattani provinces have stopped, while flooding in Phatthalung has eased. Continuous aid was distributed to affected residents in Songkhla Province including to Malaysian residents in the border of Narathiwat as Thai Prime Minister ...

  7. Floods in Thailand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floods_in_Thailand

    Floods in Thailand are regular natural disasters in Thailand which happen nearly every year during the monsoon season. The monsoon seasons in the country are distinct by region, the southern part mirrors the Malay Peninsula and monsoon begins in October and ends in March. The rest of the nation has monsoons and/or frequent thundershowers from ...

  8. List of disasters in Thailand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_disasters_in_Thailand

    22 November 1988: Landslides in Ban Kathun Nuea, Phipun District and Ban Khiri Wong, Lan Saka District in Nakhon Si Thammarat resulted in 230 deaths or injuries, and 12 deaths, respectively, and damages worth 1 billion baht. 1–4 November 1989: Typhoon Gay struck the coast of Chumphon Province, resulting in 833 deaths and 11.7 billion baht in ...

  9. Typhoon Gay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typhoon_Gay

    Typhoon Gay, also known as the Kavali Cyclone of 1989, [1] was a small but powerful tropical cyclone which caused more than 800 fatalities in and around the Gulf of Thailand in November 1989. The worst typhoon to affect the Malay Peninsula in thirty-five years, Gay originated from a monsoon trough over the Gulf