Friday, November 8, 2013

Super Typhoon Haiyan



November 7th, 2013 will go down in history as having the largest tropical storm to ever make landfall hit the Philippines.  This is a storm of astronomical proportions that are rarely seen.  The sustained winds in the storm were estimated at 190 to 195 miles per hour.  The pressure has been estimated to be near the record low of 870mb.  Tropical storm force winds extended out almost 120 miles and the storm itself is nearly 300 miles wide.  Those wind estimates were also only the sustained winds.  Gusts could be as high as 250 miles per hours




The area was already in devastation after being hit with a 7.1 earthquake only one month ago.  Many structures were already weakened or destroyed from that event.  Now, here comes a 100 mile wide F4/F5 tornado to finish off anything the earthquake had left behind.



Not only the winds, but storm surges will be devastating as many of the larger cities are only 10 feet or so above sea level.  Storm surges were estimated to be as high as 17 feet.  Then on top of that there are waves that were measured at 55 feet in some buoys at sea.  So there you have a 7 story high wall of water crashing in during an F5 tornado like winds. 



Right now we can only hope that the proper precautions were taken to evacuate to as safe a location as possible for the tens of thousands in this storms path.  Communication with the landfall area and surrounding places has gone completely silent.  We’ve seen what storms like Andrew and Camille can do, and this storm even eclipses those.  Our prayers are with those in the Philippines, and subsequent places as this storm moves on to Vietnam and Laos with massive rains and still a cat 2 storm and rainfall measured in feet.




Update:  short video of typhoon Haiyan winds
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=1429784490569228


Update 11/8...  New picture in of damage.  Looks devastating.

 

This video only shows a small bit of what the storm was giving, and much of it likely more on the outer fringes.  You would not be standing around filming in 195mph winds.  There is nothing coming out of the landfall area at the moment.


Update 11/9:  Reports of storm damage in the Philippines is just beginning to come out.  Red Cross is reporting that as many as 1200 people are dead, and that count should rise as many areas are completely cut off with no communications and the path to them is littered with debris.  The only saving grace was that the forward speed of the storm, 35mph, which was much faster than most storms. 



11/9 update...  Now that officials are beginning to sift through the disaster, they are estimating that more than 10,000 people may have been killed, and that is just in the one provincial capital where storm surges were 2 stories high.

http://news.yahoo.com/philippine-typhoon-death-toll-could-reach-10-000-011657978.html

Update 11/10
Super typhoon Haiyan destroyed about 70 to 80 percent of the area in its path as it tore through Leyte province on Friday, said police chief superintendent Elmer Soria. As rescue workers struggled to reach ravaged villages along the coast, where the death toll is as yet unknown, survivors foraged for food as supplies dwindled or searched for lost loved ones. “People are walking like zombies looking for food,” said Jenny Chu, a medical student in Leyte.

To Help: http://www.redcross.org/weather

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