Typhoon Nelson (1982) Explained

Typhoon Nelson (Bising)
Formed:March 19, 1982
Dissipated:April 1, 1982
Winds:100
Pressure:930
Winds:110
Basin:WPac
Year:1982
Fatalities:56
Damage:17200000
Areas:Philippines
Season:1982 Pacific typhoon season

Typhoon Nelson, known in the Philippines as Typhoon Bising, was the second tropical cyclone to strike the Philippines within a week in March 1982. Nelson originated from a tropical disturbance southeast of Guam towards the middle of March. Although the system was initially poorly organized, it developed rather quickly, and was upgraded into Tropical Storm Nelson on March 19. It tracked westward, and fluctuated in intensity for several days. On March 24, Typhoon Nelson intensified into a typhoon, and entered an episode of rapid intensification. On March 25, Nelson reached its peak intensity of 115km/h, but thereafter moved ashore on the Philippines, where the storm weakened significantly. On March 27, the typhoon entered the South China Sea, and the next day, briefly re-intensified before resuming a weakening trend. Nelson dissipated on March 31.

Affecting the nation less than a week after Tropical Storm Mamie did, Nelson was responsible for additional flooding across much of the Philippines. Fifty-six people were killed due to the typhoon, eight of whom perished due to drownings. Over 1,200 homes were destroyed. More than 165,000 people fled to shelters, including 83,000 that were displaced from their home. Thirty fishing boats and 23 ferries were destroyed due to the system. Damage amounted to $17.2 million (1982 USD).

Meteorological history

The second of three early season tropical cyclones to form in the West Pacific basin, Typhoon Nelson can be traced back to a low latitude area of disturbed in mid-March.[1] The Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) started watching the system at 0000 UTC on March 18[2] while a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert (TCFA) was issued. Initially, the system was disorganized, but the disturbance was located in a favorable environment aloft and began to develop rapidly. Ten hours after the TCFA, the JTWC upgraded the system into a tropical depression. Early on March 19, the JMA classified the system as a tropical storm. Later that morning, Hurricane Hunters reported winds of 95abbr=onNaNabbr=on and a barometric pressure of 993mbar. Based on this, the JTWC designated the system as Tropical Storm Nelson.[3]

Nelson tracked westward, staying south of a large subtropical ridge. Despite the aforementioned favorable environment, Nelson briefly weakened late on March 19, but re-intensified slightly the following morning. Shortly thereafter, the JTWC upgraded the system into a typhoon. Further intensification was halted due to increased easterly wind shear, and the storm began to level off in intensity as it accelerated on a westward course. On March 21, the JMA declared Nelson a severe tropical storm. According to the JTWC, the storm fluctuated between tropical storm and typhoon status for about 60 hours, even though the JMA suggest that Nelson did not become a typhoon until March 24. Around this time, the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) also started monitoring the storm, assigning it with the local name Bising.

After becoming a typhoon, Nelson forward's speed began to slow down as the storm began to move away from the ridge and encounter more conducive conditions. Consequently, Typhoon Nelson began to deepen more rapidly, and by the afternoon of March 25, both the JTWC and JMA increased the intensity to 185abbr=onNaNabbr=on. Although the JMA suggests the system reached its peak intensity at that time, the JTWC indicated that Nelson strengthen slightly on March 25, and attained winds of 195abbr=onNaNabbr=on, equivalent to a major hurricane or a Category 3 system on the United States-based Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale. Shortly thereafter, the storm moved ashore in the Philippine at peak intensity. After making landfall, Nelson weakened over the south-central portion of the nation. By March 26, the JMA had lowered the winds to 160abbr=onNaNabbr=on.

By March 27, Nelson re-emerged into the South China Sea, having weakened considerably, and data from both the JMA and JTWC indicated that Nelson was no longer a typhoon. The next day, Nelson briefly re-intensified slightly, and at 1800 UTC on March 28, the JMA estimated a secondary peak intensity of 105abbr=onNaNabbr=on. On the following day, Nelson resumed weakening due to increased wind shear. Despite the presence of a trough, Nelson did not recurve northeast, and instead meandered westward. On the afternoon of March 31, the JMA ceased watching Nelson. On the next day, the JTWC followed suit while located about 450abbr=onNaNabbr=on east of Nha Trang, Vietnam.

Preparations and impact

Typhoon Nelson was the second storm to strike the Philippines within a week, following Tropical Storm Mamie, which claimed 54 lives. Considered a "pre-season" storm by newspapers, Nelson required storm warnings for parts of the nation, which were broadcast via radio.[4] Much of the southern section of the Philippines were placed on typhoon alert.[5] Due to the threat of storm surge, residents in coastal areas were advised to evacuate to higher ground.[6]

Typhoon Nelson was responsible for significant flooding across the Philippines. On the offshore Leyte Island, a radio transmitter and a school were destroyed.[7] In Cebu City, schools, businesses, and government offices were closed for a day. Across the low-lying town of Abucay, flooding occurred.[8] A total of 1,261 dwellings were leveled, including 703 houses destroyed in the provinces of Cebu, Bohol, and Surigao,[9] leaving approximately 83,000 people homeless.[10] In Loreto Town, part of the Suriago Province, 95% of all coconut trees were toppled, and all but 45 of the town's 600 houses were demolished.[11] A total of 165,462 persons evacuated to shelters. Widespread power outages occurred while many bridges were washed away.[9] Shipping and air services were halted; 30 fishing boats[12] and 23 ferries were destroyed. In all, 56 people perished due to Typhoon Nelson.[9] Ten died in the hard-hit Leyte Province. At least eight of the casualties were due to drownings, which included two women and an infant.[13] Overall, damage from Nelson amounted to $17.2 million,[14] crop and property damage alone totaled $7.4 million.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Annual Tropical Cyclone Report: 1982. April 10, 2014. 1983. Joint Typhoon Warning Center. United States Navy, United States Airforce. Naval Western Oceanography Center.
  2. Japan Meteorological Agency. October 10, 1992. RSMC Best Track Data  - 1980 - 1989. April 10, 2014. .TXT. https://web.archive.org/web/20141205202709/http://www.jma.go.jp/jma/jma-eng/jma-center/rsmc-hp-pub-eg/Besttracks/bst8089.txt. December 5, 2014. dead.
  3. Kenneth R. Knapp . Michael C. Kruk . David H. Levinson . Howard J. Diamond . Charles J. Neumann . 2010. The International Best Track Archive for Climate Stewardship (IBTrACS): Unifying tropical cyclone best track data. 1985 NELSON (1985227N16149). Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. April 10, 2014.
  4. News: Philippines braces for second pre-season typhoon . March 23, 1982 . United Press International.
  5. News: International News . March 24, 1982 . United Press International.
  6. News: Typhoon Nelson lashes Philippines . March 25, 1982 . United Press International.
  7. News: Typhoon Nelson hits the Philippines . March 26, 1982 . United Press International.
  8. News: Second pre-season typhoon moves to central island . March 26, 1982 . United Press International . Del Mundo, Fernando.
  9. News: International . March 27, 1982 . United Press International.
  10. News: International News . March 29, 1982 . Associated Press.
  11. News: Typhoon death toll rises to 18. United Press International. March 28, 1982.
  12. News: Typhoon leaves 60,000 homeless . March 27, 1982 . United Press International.
  13. News: Typhoon Kills Eight People in the Philippines . March 28, 1982 . Associated Press.
  14. Destructive Typhoons 1970-2003 . November 9, 2004 . National Disaster Coordinating Council . May 20, 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20041109181317/http://baseportal.com/cgi-bin/baseportal.pl?htx=%2Fmiso%2Ftyphoons&cmd=list&range=0%2C20&YEAR~=1982&cmd=all&Id=77 . November 9, 2004 . dead .