Cyclone Hyacinthe was the wettest tropical cyclone on record worldwide. The eighth named storm of the season, Hyacinthe formed on January15, 1980, to the northeast of Mauritius in the southern Indian Ocean. Initially it moved to the west-southwest, and while slowly intensifying it passed north of the French overseas department of Réunion. On January19, Météo-France estimated that the storm had intensified to a tropical cyclone. Hyacinthe looped to the south of eastern Madagascar and weakened, although it restrengthened after turning to the east. The storm executed another loop to the southwest of Réunion, passing near the island for a second and later third time. Hyacinthe became extratropical on January29 after turning southward, dissipating two days later.
For twelve days, Hyacinthe dropped torrential rainfall on Réunion; nearly all of the island received more than 1m (3.3ft) of precipitation. Over a 15-day period from January14 to January28, 6,083mm (239.5in) of rainfall were recorded at Commerson Crater, a volcano caldera. The heaviest rainfall occurred through a process called orographic lift in the mountainous interior, leading to hundreds of landslides. Widespread floods damaged half the roads on Réunion and isolated three villages. Hyacinthe caused heavy damage to crops and damaged or destroyed 2,000houses. Losses from the storm totaled $167million (1980USD, 676million francs),[nb 1] and 25people were killed.
Meteorological history
In the middle of January 1980, the Intertropical Convergence Zone persisted along 10°S, spawning a small low-level circulation near St. Brandon.[1] According to Météo-France (MFR), a tropical depression formed about 355km (221mi) northeast of Mauritius on January15.[nb 2] It tracked to the west-southwest, passing north of the island on January17.[3] That day, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) also reported that a tropical depression had developed, giving it the identifier "08S". Shortly thereafter, the JTWC upgraded the depression to a tropical storm,[4] and the MFR followed suit on January18, naming the storm Hyacinthe.[3] The storm gradually intensified as it passed north of Réunion, with 1-minute winds of 110km/h (68mph) by January19, according to the JTWC.[4] That day, an eye developed,[1] and MFR estimated that Hyacinthe intensified to tropical cyclone status, with 10-minute winds of 120km/h (75mph).[3] A strengthening anticyclone to the south turned the storm northwestward,[1] and on January20, Hyacinthe executed a small loop to the south, just offshore eastern Madagascar.[3]
While moving to the south, Hyacinthe's winds steadily decreased, as the storm weakened. On January21, the storm weakened below tropical cyclone intensity,[3] and on January22 the JTWC estimated winds decreased to 75km/h (47mph). The next day, it turned to the east while slowly re-intensifying. On January24, the JTWC upgraded Hyacinthe to the equivalent of a minimal hurricane, with winds of 120km/h (75mph). After approaching within 175km (109mi) west-southwest of Réunion, the cyclone turned to the northwest and executed another loop. The JTWC estimated that Hyacinthe reached peak winds of 130km/h (81mph) on January25, which the storm maintained for about 24hours. During that time, Hyacinthe turned to the southeast and later weakened. On January26, it moved near Réunion for the third time, passing about 105km (65mi) to the south.[4] The storm turned southward, becoming extratropical on January29. Over the next two days, the remnants of Hyacinthe accelerated, turned to the east, and dissipated to the southeast of Madagascar.[3]
Impact
For twelve days, the circulation of the storm produced cloudiness and thunderstorms over Réunion.[5] Hyacinthe broke several rainfall records for tropical cyclones, becoming the wettest tropical cyclone on record.[6] From January14 to January28, the storm dropped 6,083mm (239.5in) at Commerson Crater,[7] just north of the Piton de la Fournaise volcano.[8] Over ten days, Hyacinthe produced 5,678mm (223.5in), also at Commerson.[9] In twelve hours, Hyacinthe dropped 1,095mm (43.1in) of rainfall at Grand Îlet, just 49mm (1.9in) shy of the record set by Cyclone Denise in 1966.[6] The highest daily total was on January25, when 1,140mm (45in) fell at Commerson.[5] Over a three-day period, the storm dropped 3,240mm (128in) at Commerson, as well as 4,300mm (170in) over a five-day period ending on January28.[6] Only a small portion of the island near Saint-Pierre received less than 1m (3.3ft) of rainfall, and totals increased further inland,[5] with over 2m (6.6ft) recorded at four locations.[8] Such heavy rainfall typically occurs on the island when tropical cyclones approach, owing to orographic enhancement in the mountainous interior.[8]
In addition to the rainfall, Hyacinthe produced a minimum barometric pressure of 977.8mbar (28.87inHg) at Saint-Pierre on January27. Wind gusts reached 150km/h (93mph) in Saint-Denis, although the mountainous portion of the island reported winds as strong as 180km/h (110mph). Wave action was not severe due to the quick changes in track and lack of significant intensity. There was some beach erosion along western-facing beaches, and Pointe des Galets sustained damage to coastal properties.[5] However, any major damage caused by the storm was largely due to the heavy rainfall. The Rivière Langevin reported increased flow, reaching a discharge of about 300m3/s (10,500ft3/s).[10] Along Rivière-du-Mat les Bas, river flooding entered five houses. Floods washed out a 30m (98ft) and a 60m (200ft) portion of a highway along a ravine near Chaudron. Along Route nationale 1, traffic was disrupted after rocks blocked the roadway. In Petite-Île, floods washed out a bridge and 200m (660ft) of roads.[5] About half of the roads on Réunion were damaged,[11] and road damage was estimated at $40million (1980USD, 161.3million francs). The rain caused widespread mudslides, including hundreds near Salazie and Cilaos.[5] Three towns were temporarily isolated,[5] including Hell-Bourg which was cut off for about eight days,[12] Helicopters delivered food and clothing to the villages.[5]
Throughout Réunion, Hyacinthe killed 25people and left 7,000 homeless.[13] Four of the deaths occurred after a house was washed away at Petite-Île. A school was destroyed in Saint-Louis. The storm caused power and water outages, and about 30% of the island temporarily lost phone service. Hyacinthe damaged 1,712houses and destroyed another 288; housing damage totaled about $42million (1980USD, 170million francs). Flooding caused $48million (1980USD, 194million francs) in agricultural damage, including about 1,000 killed cattle and near-total losses to bananas, mangoes, and avocados. Overall damage was estimated at $167million (676million francs).[5] Many records set by the storm were broken by Cyclone Gamede in 2007, including the rainfall accumulations from three to eight days.[14] However, Hyacinthe retained its status as the wettest overall tropical cyclone.[9]
Elsewhere, Hyacinthe affected Madagascar as a weaker storm. Wind gusts reached 126km/h (78mph) at Mananjary and 111km/h (69mph) on Île Sainte-Marie. At the same two locations, rainfall reached 207 and 134mm (8.1 and 5.3in), respectively.[1] On Mauritius, the storm's passage forced the main port to close.[11]
La Météorlogie, Service de la Réunion (1981). "La Saison Cyclonique 1979-1980 A Madagascar"(PDF). Madagascar: Revue de Géographie (in French). 38 (Janv-Juin 1981): 116. Retrieved 2013-04-13.
This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Cyclone_Hyacinthe, and is written by contributors.
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