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* ] (2016) (T1626, 30W, Nina) – the strongest tropical cyclone ever recorded on ]; made landfall in Philippines, causing 13 fatalities and $123 million worth of damage. | * ] (2016) (T1626, 30W, Nina) – the strongest tropical cyclone ever recorded on ]; made landfall in Philippines, causing 13 fatalities and $123 million worth of damage. | ||
During the 2017 annual session of the ] Typhoon Committee, the name ''Nock-ten'' was retired from the naming lists, and |
During the 2017 annual session of the ] Typhoon Committee, the name ''Nock-ten'' was retired from the naming lists, and was replaces with '']'' named after the ]. Hinnamnor was retired after the ]. Its replacement name will be announced in 2024. | ||
{{storm index|Nock-ten}} | {{storm index|Nock-ten}} |
Revision as of 15:17, 27 May 2023
The name Nock-ten has been used to name three tropical cyclones in the northwestern Pacific Ocean. The name was contributed by Laos and refers to the kingfisher.
- Typhoon Nock-ten (2004) (T0424, 28W, Tonyo) – a strong typhoon which affected Taiwan and Japan, claiming 3 lives.
- Severe Tropical Storm Nock-ten (2011) (T1108, 10W, Juaning) – a relatively strong tropical cyclone which was considered by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) as a Category 1-equivalent typhoon; struck the Philippines and Vietnam, killing 128 people and causing damage worth US$126 million.
- Typhoon Nock-ten (2016) (T1626, 30W, Nina) – the strongest tropical cyclone ever recorded on Christmas Day; made landfall in Philippines, causing 13 fatalities and $123 million worth of damage.
During the 2017 annual session of the WMO Typhoon Committee, the name Nock-ten was retired from the naming lists, and was replaces with Hinnamnor named after the Hin Namno Conservation Area. Hinnamnor was retired after the 2022 Pacific typhoon season. Its replacement name will be announced in 2024.
List of storms with the same or similar names This article includes a list of named storms that share the same name (or similar names).If an internal link incorrectly led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended storm article. Categories: