Wikipedia:WikiProject Tropical cyclones/Newsletter/Archive 22

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Number 22, November 2, 2008

The Hurricane Herald

This is the monthly newsletter of WikiProject Tropical Cyclones. The Hurricane Herald aims to give a summary, both of the activities of the WikiProject and global tropical cyclone activity. If you wish to change how you receive this newsletter, or no longer wish to receive it, please add your username to the appropriate section on the mailing list. This newsletter covers all of October 2008.

Please visit this page and bookmark any suggestions of interest to you. This will help improve monitoring of the WikiProject's articles.

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Storm of the month

Image:TC03A2008.jpg

Deep Depression ARB 02 caused the 2008 Yemen floods. On October 19 the IMD noted that an area of low pressure which located to the south east of Salalah, Oman had intensifed in to a tropical depression and was assigned the number ARB 02. On October 21 IMD updated the system to a Deep Depression while it lay 700 km south of Salalah, Oman near the east coast of Somalia. It lost its strength while crossing the Gulf of Aden due to entry of dry air and land interaction as it passed close to the northeastern coast of Somalia. It later was downgraded to a Depression, named TC 03B by the JTWC. On October 24 it made landfall on the south-eastern coast of Yemen, leaving at least 26 civilians and six soldiers dead while trapping hundreds of people due to flooding and torrential rainfalls. The latest figure of casualties is of 184 persons dead and 100 others missing, mostly from the region of Hadhramawt, where the storm made landfall. A total of 733 houses were destroyed in the governorates of Hadhramaut and Al Mahrah, while 22,000 people were displaced. The Yemeni Government declared the two aforementioned governorates as disaster zones.

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Other tropical cyclone activity

  • Atlantic Ocean– In the Atlantic, four tropical cyclones formed this October. Tropical Storm Marco formed in the Bay of Campeche on October 6. It made landfall on October 8 and is one of the smallest Atlantic tropical cyclones since 1988. Tropical Storm Nana formed October 12 in the middle of the open Atlantic. It had no impact anywhere and dissipated October 14. Hurricane Omar formed October 13 and dissipated October 18. Eventually peaking as a Category 4 hurricane, Omar passed through the Lesser Antilles twice, including once near peak intensity. Fortunately, it caused only one indirect death. Tropical Depression Sixteen formed on October 16 and dissipated two days later after making landfall. It killed 16 to 20 people in Central America.

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Member of the month

Image:Cyclone barnstar.png

The October member of the month is Hurricanehink. Since joining the project near its inception, Hurricanehink has been involved in bringing forty two articles, eighteen lists and six topics to featured status. Just this month, Hurricanehink was mentioned in the Signpost Dispatch. Hurricanehink has also been the regular distributor for this newsletter.

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New members

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New and improved articles

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Main Page content

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Storm article statistics

border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" style="margin: 0 0 0 0.5em; background: #FFFFFF; border-collapse: collapse; border-color: #C0C090;"

| {{chembox header}} colspan=1 | Grade

! {{chembox header}} colspan=1 | Jul

! {{chembox header}} colspan=1 | Aug

! {{chembox header}} colspan=1 | Sep

! {{chembox header}} colspan=1 | Oct

align=right

| {{FA-Class}}

| 42

464748
align=right

| {{A-Class}}

| 18

181919
align=right

| {{GA-Class}}

| 139

145161187
align=right

| {{B-Class}}

| 15

141712
align=right

| {{C-Class}}

| 98

99107113
align=right

| {{Start-Class}}

| 202

197201201
align=right

| {{Stub-Class}}

| 10

151920
align=right

! {{chembox header}} colspan=1 | Total

| {{chembox header}} colspan=1 | 524

| {{chembox header}} colspan=1 | 537

| {{chembox header}} colspan=1 | 571

| {{chembox header}} colspan=1 | 600

align=right

! {{chembox header}} colspan=1 | ω

| {{chembox header}} colspan=1 | 2.94

| {{chembox header}} colspan=1 | 2.92

| {{chembox header}} colspan=1 | 2.92

| {{chembox header}} colspan=1 | 2.88

align=right

| percentage
Less than C

| 40.5

39.538.536.8
align=right

| percentage
GA or better

| 38.0

39.339.842.3
align=right

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Project News

A discussion concerning sandboxes for next year's articles has begun. Please consider working on sandboxes so they will be ready to publish. As tropical cyclones can form at any time in the western Pacific and northern Indian Oceans, these two season's should be made ready for cyclones by December. Ideally, due to the possibility of pre-season storms, the eastern Pacific and Atlantic seasons should also be ready by then, but they should at least be ready by the northern-Hemisphere antipeak in late February and early March. Seasons for the years 2010 to 2015 should be given the name "Post-2009 {ocean name} {cyclone term} seasons", as in "Post 2009 Atlantic hurricane seasons".

A category for tropical cyclone articles of very-low importance has been introduced. Although discussion is still ongoing, a rating of very-low-importance will generally be given to weak cyclones that do not have impact or set any sort of record.

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Editorial

This month, our usual editor, Hurricanehink, has been on a semi-wikibreak until further notice. I am filling in as editor and distributor on an interim basis. The newsletter will continue as normal during that time. Thank you. Miss Madeline | Talk to Madeline 00:49, 2 November 2008 (UTC)