Super Typhoon Nina (1975)
Posted: Thu Aug 19, 2010 10:18 pm
A trough in the western Pacific spawns a bunch of disturbances on July 29, 1975. One of those disturbances forms into a tropical depression than a tropical storm named Nina. Tropical Storm Nina rapidly intensifies and becomes Super Typhoon Nina with winds of 160 mph (140 knots) and central pressure of 904 millibars on August 1, 1975, making it a Category 5 typhoon.
Nina makes it first landfall on Taiwan was a Category 3 typhoon with 115 mph (100 knots) wind and it weakens considerably. Gusts as high as 138 mph (119 knots) were recorded and up to 28 inches (70 centimeters) of rain fell in Taiwan. 29 people were killed from Nina, Then it emerges in the Formosa Straits as a Category 1 typhoon. Then Nina makes it final landfall on Jinjiang, Fujian, China on as a 70 mph (60 knots) tropical storm. The worst was yet to come.
As Nina moved inland, it interacted with a front and stalled out. It dumped extremely heavy rains over the Zhumadian, Henan where Banqiao Dam is located. Up to 33 inches (83 centimeters) of rain fell in 6 hours! Nina dumped a total of 64.2 inches (163 centimeters) of rain. All that heavy rain caused the Banqiao Dam and 61 other dams to fail. All that flood water from the heavy rains of Nina killed at least 100,000 people. Some put the death toll as high as 250,000. The flooding created temporary lakes of dead bodies and debris. The flood was a 1 in 2,000 year event.
Nina is one of the deadliest typhoons on record and one of the deadliest tropical cyclones in history.
China would be hit by an even deadlier disaster, the Tangshan Earthquake in the early morning hours of July 28, 1976. It had a magnitude of 8.2. It claimed at least 255,000 lives. Some put it as high as 750,000 killed from the earthquake, making it one of the deadliest disasters in history.
Wikipedia-Typhoon Nina
Wikipedia-Banqiao Dam
Wikipedia-List of Natural Disasters By Death Toll
JTWC's ATCR on the 1975 typhoon season
Nina makes it first landfall on Taiwan was a Category 3 typhoon with 115 mph (100 knots) wind and it weakens considerably. Gusts as high as 138 mph (119 knots) were recorded and up to 28 inches (70 centimeters) of rain fell in Taiwan. 29 people were killed from Nina, Then it emerges in the Formosa Straits as a Category 1 typhoon. Then Nina makes it final landfall on Jinjiang, Fujian, China on as a 70 mph (60 knots) tropical storm. The worst was yet to come.
As Nina moved inland, it interacted with a front and stalled out. It dumped extremely heavy rains over the Zhumadian, Henan where Banqiao Dam is located. Up to 33 inches (83 centimeters) of rain fell in 6 hours! Nina dumped a total of 64.2 inches (163 centimeters) of rain. All that heavy rain caused the Banqiao Dam and 61 other dams to fail. All that flood water from the heavy rains of Nina killed at least 100,000 people. Some put the death toll as high as 250,000. The flooding created temporary lakes of dead bodies and debris. The flood was a 1 in 2,000 year event.
Nina is one of the deadliest typhoons on record and one of the deadliest tropical cyclones in history.
Code: Select all
1. 1,000,000 1970 Bhola cyclone East Pakistan, Pakistan (now Bangladesh) November 13, 1970
2. 300,000 1839 Indian cyclone India November 25, 1839
3. 300,000 1737 Calcutta cyclone India October 7, 1737
4. 210,000 Super Typhoon Nina—contributed to Banqiao Dam failure China August 7, 1975
5. 200,000 Great Backerganj Cyclone of 1876 present day Bangladesh October 30, 1876
6. 150,000 Cyclone Nargis Myanmar May 2, 2008
7. 138,866 1991 Bangladesh cyclone Bangladesh April 29, 1991
8. 100,000 1882 Bombay cyclone Bombay, India 1882
9. 60,000 1922 Swatow Typhoon China August 1, 1922
9. 60,000 1864 Calcutta Cyclone India October 5, 1864
Wikipedia-Typhoon Nina
Wikipedia-Banqiao Dam
Wikipedia-List of Natural Disasters By Death Toll
JTWC's ATCR on the 1975 typhoon season