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Part of the 2021 Pacific typhoon season, Kompasu originated from an area of low pressure east of the Philippines on 6 October 2021. The Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) classified it as a tropical depression that day.
The October 2009 North American storm complex was a powerful extratropical cyclone that was associated with the remnants of Typhoon Melor, which brought extreme amounts of rainfall to California. The system started out as a weak area of low pressure (an Aleutian Low), that formed in the northern Gulf of Alaska on October 7.
Typhoon Melor, known in the Philippines as Typhoon Nona, was a powerful tropical cyclone that struck the Philippines in December 2015. The twenty-seventh named storm and the eighteenth typhoon of the annual typhoon season , Melor killed 51 people and caused ₱ 7.04 billion (US$148.3 million) in damage.
On January 19, a tropical depression formed, becoming the first Northern Hemisphere tropical cyclone of the year and of the 2021 Pacific typhoon season. It brought minor damage to the Philippines . On February 16, another system formed, with the PAGASA giving it the name Auring and the JTWC designating the system as 01W .
Typhoon Melor (2009) (T0918, 20W, Quedan) – A Category 5 typhoon that struck Japan. Typhoon Melor (2015) (T1527, 28W, Nona) – A Category 4 typhoon that struck the Philippines; The name Melor was retired by the WMO Typhoon Committee following the 2015 typhoon season and replaced with Cempaka in the 2021 season, which means plant that is ...
Typhoon Bolaven at its peak intensity while over the open Pacific on October 12, 2023. Violent typhoon is the highest category ... Melor: October 4 – 5, 2009 ...
Since 1963, the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) has assigned local names to a tropical cyclone should it move into or form as a tropical depression in their area of responsibility located between 135°E and 115°E and between 5°N-25°N, even if the cyclone has had an international name assigned to it.
It slowed down and weakened (due to interactions with Typhoon Melor), then turned back south towards the Philippines. Parma made a second landfall on October 6 with sustained winds of 105 kilometres per hour (65 mph). [3] It weakened to a tropical depression before emerging off the east coast of Luzon on October 7, remaining stationary for a day.