Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Typhoon_Maemi> ?p ?o }
- Typhoon_Maemi abstract "Typhoon Maemi, known in the Philippines as Typhoon Pogi, was the most powerful typhoon to strike South Korea since record-keeping began in the country in 1904. Maemi formed on September 4, 2003 from a disturbance in a monsoon trough in the western Pacific Ocean. It slowly intensified into Tropical Storm Maemi while moving northwestward, becoming a typhoon on September 8. That day, favorable conditions facilitated more rapid strengthening; the storm developed a well-defined eye and reached peak maximum sustained winds of 195 km/h (120 mph). While near peak intensity, Maemi decelerated and began turning to the north-northeast. Soon after, the eyewall passed over the Japanese island of Miyako-jima on September 10 and produced an air pressure reading of 912 mbar (26.9 inHg), the fourth-lowest recorded in the nation. Due to warm waters, Maemi was able to maintain much of its intensity before it made landfall just west of Busan, South Korea, on September 12. The typhoon became extratropical in the Sea of Japan the next day, although its remnants persisted for several days, lashing northern Japan with strong winds.The typhoon first affected the Ryukyu Islands of Japan. On Miyako-jima, strong winds damaged 104 buildings and left 95% of residents without power. Maemi caused heavy rainfall there, with rates of 58.5 mm (2.30 in) in an hour and 402.5 mm (15.85 in) in 24 hours, the latter setting a record. One person died on Miyako-jima after being struck by airborne debris. Elsewhere in Japan, the storm caused flights to be canceled, and rainfall-induced landslides blocked roads. There were two other deaths in Japan, and damage totaled ¥11.3 billion yen (JPY, $96 million USD). Damage was heaviest in South Korea, particularly where it moved ashore. On Jeju Island, Maemi produced a peak wind gust of 216 km/h (134 mph) and a minimum pressure of 950 mbar (28 inHg), both setting records for the country; the pressure reading broke the longstanding lowest pressure set by Typhoon Sarah in 1959. Winds in Busan near the landfall location reached 154 km/h (96 mph), the second-highest on record. The port there sustained heavy damage, restricting exports in the months following the storm. Nationwide, the high winds destroyed about 5,000 houses and damaged 13,000 homes and businesses, leaving 25,000 people homeless. About 1.47 million households lost power, and widespread crop damage occurred, resulting in the poorest rice harvest in 23 years. Across South Korea, Maemi killed 117 people, and overall damage totaled ₩5.52 trillion won (KRW, $4.8 billion USD).".
- Typhoon_Maemi thumbnail Typhoon_maemi_2003.jpg?width=300.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageExternalLink 200314.html.en.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageExternalLink T0314.pdf.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageExternalLink T0314.png.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageExternalLink besttrack.html.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageExternalLink 15W.MAEMI.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageExternalLink bwp152003.txt.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageID "4322063".
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageLength "43970".
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageOutDegree "155".
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageRevisionID "664418264".
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink 1959_Pacific_typhoon_season.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink 2000_Pacific_typhoon_season.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink 2003_Pacific_typhoon_season.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Akita,_Akita.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Akita_Prefecture.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Alaska.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink All_In_(TV_series).
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Atmospheric_circulation.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Atmospheric_convection.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Atmospheric_pressure.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Busan.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Category:2003_Pacific_typhoon_season.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Category:2003_disasters_in_the_Philippines.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Category:Retired_Pacific_typhoons.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Category:Typhoons.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Category:Typhoons_in_Japan.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Category:Typhoons_in_South_Korea.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Category:Typhoons_in_the_Philippines.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Censorship_in_North_Korea.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Chungcheong.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Chungcheong_Province.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Chuseok.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Chuuk_State.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Conjunctivitis.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Consumer_Confidence_Index.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Consumer_confidence_index.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Convection_(meteorology).
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Coordinated_Universal_Time.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Cubic_foot.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Cubic_metre_per_second.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Daegu.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Daegu_metro_fire.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Daegu_subway_fire.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Daily_Mail_and_General_Trust.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Discharge_(hydrology).
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Economic_growth.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Extratropical_cyclone.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Eye_(cyclone).
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Eyewall_replacement_cycle.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Flood_stage.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Food_for_the_Hungry.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Fujita_scale.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Gale.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Gangwon_Province_(South_Korea).
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Gimhae_International_Airport.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Guam.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Hakodate.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Hakodate,_Hokkaido.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Hirado,_Nagasaki.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Hokkaido.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Incheon.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Intermediary.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Ishigaki_Island.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Japan.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Japan_Meteorological_Agency.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_yen.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Jeju_Province.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Joint_Typhoon_Warning_Center.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Kamchatka_Peninsula.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Korea_Electric_Power_Corporation.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Korea_Exchange.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Korea_Meteorological_Administration.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Korean_drama.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Kyushu.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Kōchi_Prefecture.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Landfall.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Landfall_(meteorology).
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink List_of_United_States_Army_installations_in_South_Korea.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Mariners_Weather_Log.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Masan.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Matsumae,_Hokkaido.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Maximum_sustained_wind.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Miyako-jima.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Miyakojima.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Miyazaki_Prefecture.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Monsoon_trough.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink s.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Nagasaki_Prefecture.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Nago.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Nago,_Okinawa.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Nakdong_River.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Namhae_County.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink North_Korea.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Nuclear_power_in_South_Korea.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Oanda_Corporation.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Okinawa.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Okinawa_Prefecture.
- Typhoon_Maemi wikiPageWikiLink Outflow_(meteorology).