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Typhoon Melor (Japan),
Oct 2009
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Map of Area
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TOKYO, Oct 8, 2009 (From AFP) - A powerful typhoon slammed
into Japan's main island on Thursday, leaving two dead and a dozen injured as
strong winds ripped off roofs, uprooted trees and prompted fears of landslides.
Typhoon Melor, packing gusts of up to 162 kilometres (100 miles) an hour, cut a
swathe across densely populated central Japan, causing travel chaos and power
blackouts for hundreds of thousands of homes. The typhoon, the first to make
landfall in Japan since 2007, was "very dangerous", but weakened as it churned
across the main island of Honshu, said Takeo Tanaka, a forecaster at the
Meteorological Agency. "Winds are violent and rain is
torrential. You should also be on guard against mudslides," he said. A
54-year-old newspaper deliveryman died in western Wakayama prefecture after his
motorbike collided with a fallen tree, while a 69-year-old man was killed by a
falling branch north of Tokyo, police said. About 100 people were injured and
thousands more evacuated to shelters, the government said. There was severe
travel disruption with nearly 500 flights cancelled and many railway services,
including bullet trains, temporarily suspended. Television footage showed trucks
blown over and cars abandoned in the middle of flooded roads. The economy also
took a hit as manufacturers including Toyota Motor, the world's biggest
automaker, halted production while the storm passed. As many as 570,000
households in west and central Japan experienced power cuts, while blackouts hit
about 16,000 homes and businesses in and around Tokyo. The storm moved to the
northern Tohoku region in the afternoon, leaving at least 31,000 households
there without electricity, before heading back out into the Pacific Ocean.
Farmers rushed to harvest fruit before the typhoon arrived, while elsewhere
dozens of cows escaped after their barn was damaged. An Asian Cup qualifier
between Japan and Hong Kong went ahead as planned after the city of Shizuoka
avoided a direct hit from the typhoon, the Japan Football Association said. The
typhoon made landfall in central Aichi prefecture shortly after 5:00 am
(2000 GMT Wednesday) and ripped across the main island on a path north of Tokyo,
where blue skies had returned by Thursday afternoon. The weather agency said
heavy rain was expected to lash Hokkaido, the northernmost main island, through
Friday although the storm was likely to be downgraded to a tropical depression
on Saturday. The typhoon, while fierce, did not appear to have been as
devastating as some had feared. On Wednesday forecasters had described it as one
of the worst storms to threaten the country in the past decade. Japan has built
extensive defences against floods and landslides, including storm surge barriers
in coastal areas. But typhoons can still be deadly. In October 2004 Typhoon
Tokage killed 95 people in the archipelago. Melor, which means jasmine in Malay,
is the latest in a series of powerful typhoons to batter Asia in recent weeks.
In August, Typhoon Etau brought flash floods and landslides that killed at least
25 people in Japan, even though it avoided a direct hit. Another powerful storm,
Ketsana, has caused devastation across Southeast Asia, killing hundreds of
people, mostly in the Philippines and Vietnam. In Taiwan more than 600 people
died after Typhoon Morakot struck in August.
Description: These Medium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer
(MERIS) images below acquired between 06 and 08 OOctober
2009 along the coasts of Japan, shows Typhoon Melor during its destructive
passage along the Island.
Technical Information: MERIS_RR_1P
Instrument features: Reduced Resolution image (1200 - meter resolution)
Orbit Direction: Descending
Bands combination: 11 (red),
14 (green), 3 (blue), corresponding to
bands, were used to create this image.
Click on the thumbnails below to download the Wallpaper images
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MER_RR_Date20091008_Time002609_Orbit39764
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MER_RR_Date20091006_Time012908_Orbit39736
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