30 of the Most Powerful Tropical Weather Systems Ever Recorded in History

#29 Typhoon Nadine (1971)

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Duration: July 19-27, 1971
Origin: Pacific Ocean, East-Southeast of the Philippines
Highest 1-minute Sustained Winds: 175 mph (280 kph)
Lowest central atmospheric pressure: 900 millibars

On July 19, 1971, Typhoon Nadine began forming in the Pacific Ocean, approximately 2000km East-southeast of the Philippines. It strengthened rapidly, reaching a peak wind speed of 175 mph but weakened slightly before making landfall in eastern Taiwan. Despite its winds weakening, Nadine took 28 lives and caused massive destruction in Taiwan as a result of flooding. A Pan American Cargo plane with four souls on board allegedly crashed due to Typhoon Nadine’s power.

#28 Typhoon Hope (1970)

Image source: https://upload.wikimedia.org/

Duration: September 19-30, 1970
Origin: Pacific Ocean, southeast of Taiwan
Highest 1-minute Sustained Winds: 175 mph (280 kph)
Lowest central atmospheric pressure: 900 millibars

Typhoon Hope was the strongest storm of the 1971 season and was declared as a Category-5 super typhoon with its central pressure briefly reaching 895 millibars. Luckily, despite it being a very powerful and potentially destructive force, Typhoon Hope stayed away from land before dying out on September 30, 1971.

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