First system formed 17 November 1973 Name Jessie Tropical cyclones 19 | Last system dissipated 23 March 1974 Tropical lows 19 Severe tropical cyclones 9 | |
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The 1973–74 Australian region cyclone season saw above normal activity.
Contents
- Severe Tropical Cyclone Ines
- Tropical Cyclone Annie
- Severe Tropical Cyclone Beryl
- Tropical Cyclone Natalie Lottie
- Severe Tropical Cyclone Cecily
- Tropical Cyclone Una
- Severe Tropical Cyclone Deidre Delida
- Tropical Cyclone Erica
- Tropical Cyclone Fiona Gwenda
- Tropical Cyclone Vera
- Tropical Cyclone Wanda
- Severe Tropical Cyclone Pam
- Tropical Cyclone Yvonne
- Severe Tropical Cyclone Helen
- Severe Tropical Cyclone Zoe
- Severe Tropical Cyclone Isobel
- Severe Tropical Cyclone Jessie
- Tropical Cyclone Jenny
- Tropical Cyclone Alice
- References
Severe Tropical Cyclone Ines
On November 17, Ines formed offshore the Top End. Moving westward, the cyclone passed north of Bathurst and Melville islands. Thereafter, Ines curved southwestward and intensified into a 130 km/h (80 mph) cyclone while nearing Troughton Island. The storm made landfall in Kimberley, Western Australia on November 19. Ines slowly weakened after moving inland and dissipated on November 24.
Tropical Cyclone Annie
Cyclone Annie developed northwest of Western Australia on November 21. By December 8, it dissipated.
Severe Tropical Cyclone Beryl
Beryl formed just south of the Lesser Sunda Islands on November 26. The cyclone strengthened, peaking with winds of 125 km/h (75 mph) on December 1. Three days later, Beryl made landfall near Carnarvon, Western Australia and quickly dissipated. Minor wind damage was reported.
Tropical Cyclone Natalie-Lottie
Cyclone Lottie struck Fiji's Southern Lau Group on December 10. High seas caused the ship Uluilakeba to capsize killing more than 85 people.
Severe Tropical Cyclone Cecily
The next system, Cecily, developed near the Cocos Islands on December 11. Cecily moved south-southwestward and peaked with winds of 125 km/h (75 mph). On December 19, the cyclone dissipated.
Tropical Cyclone Una
Una formed southwest of Solomon Islands on December 15. It struck Queensland before dissipating on December 20.
Severe Tropical Cyclone Deidre-Delida
Cyclone Deidre developed in the vicinity of the Cocos Islands on December 20. Moving generally west-southwestward across the Indian Ocean, it crossed the 80°E on December 25.
Tropical Cyclone Erica
Tropical Cyclone Erica brought heavy rainfall to portions of Western Australia.
Tropical Cyclone Fiona-Gwenda
Fiona-Gwenda was operationally considered two different tropical cyclones.
Tropical Cyclone Vera
On January 18, Cyclone Vera developed offshore Queensland. After moving northeastward, it then curved to the southeast. On January 20, Vera crossed 160°E and entered the South Pacific basin.
Tropical Cyclone Wanda
This cyclone existed from 24 January to 27 January 1974 and led to extensive flooding over southeast Queensland. Although this tropical cyclone was relatively weak, it dropped enormous quantities of rain on south-eastern Queensland and north-eastern New South Wales over the Australia Day (26–27 January) weekend, resulting in some of the worst flooding seen in a century. The Queensland state capital, Brisbane, fared particularly badly, with fourteen lives lost and parts of the city submerged under 2 metres of the Brisbane River. (See 1974 Brisbane flood.) In northern New South Wales, a further two fatalities were reported. The cyclone's final toll: 16 dead, over 300 injured; 56 homes destroyed, a further 1,600 submerged; 8000 people left homeless.
Severe Tropical Cyclone Pam
Cyclone Pam briefly existed in the Australian region basin from February 5 to February 6.
Tropical Cyclone Yvonne
Cyclone Yvonne developed on February 8 and struck the Cape York Peninsula.
Severe Tropical Cyclone Helen
On February 28, Cyclone Helen formed offshore Western Australia. Moving generally westward, it dissipated on March 8.
Severe Tropical Cyclone Zoe
Cyclone Zoe was named and detected on 9 March 1974 when it was northeast of Brisbane. In the following days it moved steadily southward and interacted with an already-exiting trough in the easterlies to produce sustained and very heavy rainfall all along the coast from Brisbane south almost to Sydney. In the four days between 10–13 March, Brisbane received 419.4 millimetres (16.51 in) and some places in the Northern Rivers region of New South Wales received as much as 700 millimetres (28 in). With catchments already saturated by heavy January rains, record flooding occurred on the Richmond River, which reached a height of 12.17 metres (39.9 ft).
Severe Tropical Cyclone Isobel
Cyclone Isobel existed over the eastern Indian Ocean from March 9 to March 17.
Severe Tropical Cyclone Jessie
Jessie developed between Indonesia and Western Australia on March 16. Moving west-southwestward, it was last noted on March 25.
Tropical Cyclone Jenny
Cyclone Jenny struck northern Western Australia.
Tropical Cyclone Alice
The final system, Cyclone Alice, existed offshore the east coast of Australia from March 21 to March 23.