1949 Pacific typhoon season | |
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Seasonal boundaries | |
First system formed | January 13, 1949 |
Last system dissipated | December 14, 1949 |
Strongest storm | |
Name | Allyn |
• Maximum winds | 230 km/h (145 mph) (1-minute sustained) |
• Lowest pressure | 884 hPa (mbar) |
Seasonal statistics | |
Total depressions | 34 |
Total storms | 22, 6 unofficial |
Typhoons | 14 |
Super typhoons | 0 (unofficial) |
Total fatalities | At least 1,790 |
Total damage | > $127 million (1949 USD) |
Related articles | |
The 1949 Pacific typhoon season has no official bounds; it ran year-round in 1949, but most tropical cyclones tend to form in the northwestern Pacific Ocean between June and December. These dates conventionally delimit the period of each year when most tropical cyclones form in the northwestern Pacific Ocean.
The scope of this article is limited to the Pacific Ocean, north of the equator and west of the International Date Line. Storms that form east of the date line and north of the equator are called hurricanes; see 1949 Pacific hurricane season. At the time, tropical storms that formed within this region of the western Pacific were identified and named by the United States Armed Services, and these names are taken from the list that USAS publicly adopted before the 1945 season started.[1][2]