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Typhoon Usagi (2013)

Typhoon Usagi (Odette)
Typhoon (JMA scale)
Category 4 (Saffir–Simpson scale)
Usagi Sep 19 2013 0215Z.jpg
Typhoon Usagi rapidly intensifying on September 19
Formed September 16, 2013 (September 16, 2013)
Dissipated September 24, 2013 (September 24, 2013)
Highest winds 10-minute sustained: 205 km/h (125 mph)
1-minute sustained: 250 km/h (155 mph)
Lowest pressure 910 hPa (mbar); 26.87 inHg
Fatalities 35 total
Damage $4.33 billion (2013 USD)
Areas affected
Part of the 2013 Pacific typhoon season

Typhoon Usagi, known in the Philippines as Typhoon Odette, was a violent tropical cyclone which affected Taiwan, the Philippines, China, and Hong Kong in September 2013. Usagi (ウサギ, usagi), which means the constellation Lepus or literally rabbit in Japanese, was the fourth typhoon and the nineteenth tropical storm in the basin. Developing into a tropical storm east of the Philippines late on September 16, Usagi began explosive intensification on September 19 and ultimately became a violent and large typhoon. Afterwards, the system weakened slowly, crossed the Bashi Channel on September 21, and made landfall over Guangdong, China on September 22.

Early on September 16, 2013 the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) started to monitor a tropical depression, that had developed within an area of low-moderate vertical windshear about 1,300 km (810 mi) to the east of Manilla in the Philippines. During that day as the systems low level circulation centre became better defined, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert on the system while the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) named the system Odette.

Late on the same day, JMA upgraded the system to a tropical storm and named it Usagi; at the same time, The JTWC upgraded it to a tropical depression 17W, owing to a tropical upper tropospheric trough cell located to the east in association with an anticyclone enhancing the outflow in the eastern and southern quadrants.


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