User:Iune/9293

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Track map of all the tropical depressions monitored by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center and the Naval Western Oceanography Center during the season

The

tropical cyclones occurring within the South Pacific to the east of 160°E.[A 1] The season officially ran from November 1, 1994, to April 30, 1995 with the first disturbance of the season forming on November 12 and the last disturbance dissipating on March 17.[A 2] This is the period of the year when most tropical cyclones form within the South Pacific Ocean.[1]

During the season there was no one killed from tropical disturbances whilst they were within the South Pacific. Cyclone Vania helped end a long dry spell in

Within the South Pacific, tropical cyclones were monitored by the Tropical Cyclone Warning Centers (TCWC) in

Saffir–Simpson Hurricane Scale
.

This timeline includes information from post-storm reviews by TCWC Nadi, TCWC Wellington, the JTWC, and the NWOC. It documents tropical cyclone formations, strengthening, weakening, landfalls, extratropical transitions, and dissipations during the season. Reports among warning centers often differ; as such, information from all three agencies has been included.

Timeline of storms

Tropical cyclone scales#Comparisons across basins

All data for the timeline graphic is taken from TCWC Nadi/TCWC Wellington.

November

November 1

December

Track map of Severe Tropical Cyclone Joni (03P)
December 5
  • 0000 UTC, (1200 FST) – TCWC Nadi reports that a tropical depression has formed 145
    km (90 mi) northwest of Funafuti, Tuvalu.[3]
December 6
December 7
  • 1200 UTC, (0000 FST, December 8) – TCWC Nadi reports that Tropical Cyclone Joni has intensified into a category 2 tropical cyclone.[3]
December 8
  • 0000 UTC, (1200 FST) – TCWC Nadi reports that Tropical Cyclone Joni has intensified into a category 3 severe tropical cyclone.[3]
December 10
December 11
  • 1800 UTC, (0600 FST, December 12) – TCWC Nadi reports that Severe Tropical Cyclone Joni has weakened into a category 2 tropical cyclone.[3]
December 13
  • 0000 UTC, (1200 FST) – TCWC Nadi passes warning responsibility for Tropical Cyclone Joni to TCWC Wellington as the storm moves south of 25°S.[3]
  • 0600 UTC, (1800 FST) – TCWC Wellington reports that Tropical Cyclone Joni has weakened into a category 1 tropical cyclone.[3]
December 14
  • 0600 UTC, (1800 FST) – TCWC Wellington reports that Tropical Cyclone Joni has weakened into a tropical depression and dissipated.[3]

January

February

March

April

Notes

  1. ^ An average season has nine tropical cyclones, about half of which become severe tropical cyclones.
  2. ^ TCWC Nadi warned on systems in the South Pacific which is located from the equator to 25°S and from 160°E to 120°W. TCWC Wellington warns on systems from 25°S to 40°S and from 160°E to 120°W
  3. ^ UTC stands for Coordinated Universal Time.
  4. ^ FST stands for Fiji Standard Time, which is equivalent to UTC+12.
  5. miles, or kilometers), following the convention used in the Fiji Meteorological Service's operational products
    for each storm. All other units are rounded to the nearest digit.

References

  1. ^ a b c "Tropical Cyclone Operational Plan for the South Pacific and South-East Indian Ocean (2008 Edition)". World Meteorological Organization. Retrieved 17 June 2010.
  2. ^ a b Shepard, I. (June 1997). "The South Pacific and Southeast Indian Ocean Tropical Cyclone Season 1994-95" (PDF). Australian Meteorological Magazine. 46: 143–151. Retrieved 17 June 2010. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  3. ^
    Bureau of Meteorology (Australia). National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
    . 2009-05-22. Retrieved 2010-08-01.

External links

Preceded by
1991-92
South Pacific cyclone season timelines
1992–93
Succeeded by
1993-94