Japan’s
shocking, deadly deluge from Typhoon Wipha: 33 inches of rain in 24
hours
Here’s
an astonishing statistic: Typhoon Wipha dumped 33 inches (850 mm) of
rain in 24 hours on Oshima Island, 75 miles south of Tokyo
16
October, 2013
.
It
is the greatest rainstorm to occur on Oshima, populated by 8,200
people, since records began in 1991 reports
the AP. It
also twice the entire average rainfall for the month of
October, notes
the Wall Street Journal.
“People
on this island are somewhat used to heavy rainstorms, but this
typhoon was beyond our imagination,” Yutaka Sagara, an island
resident, told
the AP.
Those
are unfathomable rainfall rates and, thus, it is no surprise they led
to destructive mudslides and fatalities.
At
least 17 people are dead from the typhoon and 45 to 50 missing
according to wire reports. 16 of the 17 casualties occurred on
Oshima.
A
man walks near collapsed houses following a landslide caused by
Typhoon Wipha on Izu Oshima island, south of Tokyo, in this photo
taken by Kyodo October 16, 2013. REUTERS/Kyodo (JAPAN)
283
homes were damaged or destroyed on Oshima, the AP says.
“The
storm sent large volumes of earth down mountainsides and caused
rivers to burst their banks,” reports
the BBC.
“Television footage showed the remains of wooden homes buried in
mud and covered in debris.”
Local
residents watch rescue workers searching for survivors after a
landslide buried houses caused by heavy rain from typhoon Wipha at
Oshima island, 120km south of Tokyo on October 16, 2013. AFP
PHOTO / JIJI PRESS JAPAN OUTJIJI PRESS/AFP/Getty Images
Why
so much rain?
Typhoon
Wipha, while in a weakening phase, was transporting a tremendous
amount of tropical moisture northward. In addition, it was
merging with a mid-latitude cold front, which expanded and enhanced
its moisture plume.
Animation
of Wipha as it moves up Japan’s east coast. Colors indicate total
precipitable water as estimated by satellite; feep orange shades are
exceptionally high values indicating extremely moist tropical air.
(CIMSS
Satellite blog)
Other
Wipha impacts in Japan
Five
to 10 inches of rain fell in many areas and, in Tokyo, winds gusted
up to 72 mph. Sustained winds reached 47 at Tokyo International
Airport (Haneda), which is tropical storm force.
“More
than 500 flights at Tokyo’s Haneda and Narita airports were
canceled, and thousands of schools closed,” Reuters reports.
“Bullet train services were halted but resumed by Wednesday
afternoon”
Nearly
10 inches of
rain fell near the nuclear plant in Fukushima, which has experienced
recent problems with radioactive leaks. But Tokyo Electric Power
Corporation said the typhoon caused no problems according
to Reuters.
Another
storm on the way?
The Joint
Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC)
is monitoring tropical storm Francisco, which has the potential to
rapidly intensify and grow into a powerful typhoon.
Forecast
track for tropical storm Francisco (Joint Typhoon Warning Center)
The
JTWC forecasts its peak winds to increase from 40-45 mph today to 125
mph this weekend. If it affects Japan, it would most likely be
during the early to middle part of next week and would probably be
starting to weaken, but still a formidable storm.
33
inches of rain in 24 hours, in perspective
While
the 33 inches of rain put down by Wipha in Oshima in one day is an
obscene amount of rain, it is not an international record. This
amount has been exceeded both in the U.S. and elsewhere.
Christopher
Burt of Weather Underground notes the
U.S. 24-hour rainfall record is 43 inches in Alvin, Texas from July
25-26, 1979 (from tropical storm Claudette,AccuWeather
reports).
The
greatest 24-hour rainfall amount in the world is nearly 72 inches at
Foc-Foc, La Reunion Island, an island located in the Indian Ocean to
the east of Madagascar, Jan. 7-8, 1966. The rain was unleashed by a
tropical cyclone churning in the Indian Ocean.
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