Sequence of major cyclonic tempests
1584 Bakerganj (by and by Barisal) and Patuakhali; typhoon with thunder and helping proceeded for five hours; the houses and water crafts were gobbled up, leaving just Hindu sanctuaries on a tallness; around 2,000,000 living animals died.
1585 Mouth of the Meghna estuary; extreme tempest wave cleared up the eastern side of Bakerganj; number of living animals died, standing harvests obliterated.
1797 (November) Chittagong; extreme cyclonic tempest; each cabin leveled to the ground and 2 vessels soaked in chittagong port.
1822 (May) Barisal, Hatiya Island and Noakhali region; extreme cyclonic tempest with storm wave; Collectorate records cleared away, 40,000 individuals slaughtered and 100,000 cows lost.
1831 (October) Barisal; storm-wave; numerous lives lost and cows wrecked (correct figures not accessible).
1872 (October) Cox's Bazar; cyclonic tempest; correct figures of the loss of lives and dairy cattle are not accessible.
1876 (31 October) Meghna estuary and shores of Chittagong, Barisal, Noakhali; most extreme tempest flood of around 12.2m (40 ft) stature; around 200,000 individuals passed on amid the tempest, however maybe more individuals kicked the bucket from the eventual outcomes of the tempest, for example, plague and starvation, and gigantic properties pulverized by tidal bore. Thinking about the populace around then, a demise figure of 200,000 was for sure too substantial.
1897 (24 October) Chittagong; typhoon achieved most extreme force with arrangement of tempest waves; Kutubdia Island and seaside towns were cleared more than, 14,000 individuals murdered and 18,000 passed on in pandemics (cholera) that took after.
1898 (May) Teknaf; cyclonic tempest waves; correct figures of harm not accessible.
1904 (November) Sonadia; cyclonic tempest; 143 slaughtered and angling armada destroyed.
1909 (16 October) Khulna; cyclonic tempest waves; slaughtered 698 individuals and 70,654 steers.
1913 (October) Muktagachha upazila (Mymensingh); cyclonic tempest; annihilated numerous towns murdering around 500 people.
1917 (24 September) Khulna; typhoon; 432 people slaughtered and 28,029 dairy cattle lost.
1941 (May) Eastern Meghna estuary; cyclonic tempest with storm-wave; correct figures of the loss of lives and cows aer not accessible.
1942 (October) sundarbans; extreme cyclonic tempest; number of human lives, correct figures of the loss of untamed life and vessels are not accessible.
1948 (17-19 May) Amongst Chittagong and Noakhali; cyclonic tempest; around 1,200 people murdered and 20,000 dairy cattle lost.
1958 (16-19 May) East and west Meghna estuary, east of Barisal, Noakhali; cyclonic tempest alongside flood; 870 people executed, 14,500 dairy cattle lost and standing yields wrecked.
1958 (21-24 October) Chittagong drift; cyclonic tempest; around 100,000 families lost their homes and government needed to give house-building credits.
1960 (9-10 October) Eastern Meghna estuary (Noakhali, Bakerganj, Faridpur and Patuakhali); extreme cyclonic tempest, most extreme breeze speed 201 km/hr, greatest tempest wave 3.05m; impressive harm to Roast Jabbar, Singe Amina, Burn Bhatia, Ramgati, Hatiya and Noakhali; 3,000 lives lost, 62,725 houses harmed, trims on 94,000 sections of land of land were completely harmed and a huge number of steers died.
1960 (30-31 October) Chittagong, Noakhali, Bakerganj, Faridpur, Patuakhali and eastern Meghna estuary; extreme cyclonic tempest, greatest breeze speed 210 km/hr, flood tallness 4.5-6.1m; around 10,000 people slaughtered, 27,793 cows lost and 568,161 houses annihilated (particularly 70% of houses in Hatiya passed over), two extensive sea liners washed shorewards, 5-7 vessels upset in Karnafuli waterway.
1961 (9 May) Bagerhat and Khulna; extreme cyclonic tempest with a breeze speed of 161 km/hr, flood 2.44-3.05m; rail track amongst Noakhali and Harinarayanpur harmed, overwhelming death toll in Burn Alexander, 11,468 individuals executed and around 25,000 cattlehead crushed.
1962 (26-30 October) Feni; serious cyclonic tempest with a breeze speed of 161 km/hr, flood 2.5-3.0m; substantial death toll; around 1,000 individuals kicked the bucket and numerous local dairy cattle died.
1963 (28-29 May) Chittagong, Noakhali, Cox's Bazar and the seaward islands of Sandwip, Kutubdia, Hatiya and Maheshkhali were gravely influenced; serious cyclonic tempest with storm-wave rising 4.3-5.2m in Chittagong, most extreme breeze speed 203 km/hr and at Cox's Bazar 164 km/hr; in excess of 11,520 individuals executed, 32,617 cows lost, 376,332 houses, 4,787 water crafts and standing products devastated.
1965 (11-12 May) Barisal and Bakerganj; most extreme cyclonic tempest, greatest speed 162 km/hr with storm-wave rising 3.7m; add up to death toll 19,279; in Barisal alone 16,456 individuals slaughtered.
1965 (14-15 December) Cox's Bazar alongside adjoining beach front zone and Patuakhali; serious cyclonic tempest with storm-wave rising 4.7-6.1m; most extreme speed 210 km/hr in Cox's Bazar, lifted risk flag 10 at Cox's Bazar and along the bank of Sonadia, Rangadia and Hamidia islands, and Patuakhali; 40,000 salt beds in Cox's Bazar immersed and 873 individuals slaughtered.
1966 (1 October) Sandwip, Bakerganj, Khulna, Chittagong, Noakhali and Comilla; serious cyclonic tempest with storm-floods of 4.7-9.1m, most extreme breeze speed 146 km/hr; influenced 1.5 million individuals, loss of human life and domesticated animals were 850 and 65,000 separately in Noakhali and Bakerganj.
1969 (14 April) Demra (Dhaka region); tornado privately known as Kalbaishakhi with twist speed of 643 km/hr; 922 individuals murdered and 16,511 harmed; assessed misfortune Tk 40 to 50 million.
1970 (12-13 November) The most dangerous and destroying cyclonic tempest that caused the most astounding setback ever of. Chittagong was battered by sea tempest winds. It likewise hit Barguna, Khepupara, Patuakhali, north of Scorch Burhanuddin, Singe Tazumuddin and south of Maijdi, Haringhata and caused substantial loss of lives and harm to yields and property. Formally the demise figure was put at 500,000 yet it could be more. An aggregate of 38,000 marine and 77,000 inland anglers were influenced by the twister. It was evaluated that approximately 46,000 inland anglers working in the typhoon influenced area lost their lives. In excess of 20,000 angling pontoons were pulverized; the harm to property and products was gigantic. More than one million cattlehead were accounted for lost. In excess of 400,000 houses and 3,500 instructive organizations were harmed. The most extreme recorded breeze speed of the 1970 violent wind was around 222 km/hr and the greatest tempest flood stature was around 10.6m and the twister happened amid high-tide.
1971 (5-6 November) Chittagong drift; extreme cyclonic tempest; correct figures of the loss of lives and cows are not accessible
1971 (28-30 November) Sundarban drift; cyclonic tempest with a breeze speed of 97-113 km/hr and tempest flood of under 1m; Khulna locale experienced stormy climate and low lying regions of Khulna town immersed.
1973 (6-9 December) Sundarban drift; serious cyclonic tempest joined by storm flood; low-lying beach front regions of Patuakhali and bordering seaward islands immersed.
1974 (13-15 August) Khulna; cyclonic tempest with a breeze speed of 80.5 km/hr; around 600 lives lost and number of cattlehead decimated.
1974 (24-28 November) Beach front belt from Cox's Bazar to Chittagong and seaward islands; extreme cyclonic tempest with a breeze speed of 161 km/hr and tempest flood of 2.8-5.2 m; 200 individuals slaughtered, 1000 cows lost and 2,300 houses died.
1975 (9-12 May) Bhola, Cox's Bazar and Khulna; serious cyclonic tempest with a breeze speed of 96.5 to 112.6 km/hr; 5 people murdered and various anglers missing.
1977 (9-12 May) Khulna, Noakhali, Patuakhali, Barisal, Chittagong and seaward islands; cyclonic tempest with a breeze speed of 112.63 km/hr; correct figures of the loss of lives and cows are not accessible.
1983 (14-15 October) Seaward islands and roasts of Chittagong and Noakhali; extreme cyclonic tempest with a breeze speed of 122 km/hr; 43 people murdered, 6 angling water crafts and a trawler lost, in excess of 150 anglers and 100 angling vessels absent and 20% aman crops pulverized.
1983 (5-9 November) Chittagong, Cox's Bazar drift close Kutubdia and the low lying regions of St Martin's Island, Teknaf, Ukhia, Moipong, Sonadia, Barisal, Patuakhali and Noakhali; extreme cyclonic tempest (tropical storm) with a breeze speed of 136 km/hr and a tempest flood of 1.52m stature; 300 anglers with 50 water crafts absent and 2,000 houses decimated.
1985 (24-25 May) Chittagong, Cox's Bazar, Noakhali and their seaward islands (Sandwip, Hatiya, and Urirchar); extreme cyclonic tempest, wind speed Chittagong 154 km/hr, Sandwip 140 km/hr, Cox's Bazar 100 km/hr and tempest flood of 3.0-4.6m; around 11,069 people executed, 94,379 houses harmed, domesticated animals lost 135,033 and street harmed 74 km, dikes harmed.
1986 (8-9 November) Seaward island and burns of Chittagong, Barisal, Patuakhali and Noakhali; cyclonic tempest hit 110 km/hr at Chittagong and 90/hr at Khulna; 14 people executed, harmed 97,200 ha of paddy fields, harm to schools, mosques, distribution centers, healing centers, houses and structures at Amtali upazila in Barguna.
1988 (24-30 November) Jessore, Kushtia, Faridpur, seaward islands and roasts of Barisal and Khulna; serious cyclonic tempest with center breeze speed 162 km/hr, storm flood of 4.5m at Mongla point; slaughtered 5,708 people and part of wild creatures - deer 15,000, Illustrious Bengal Tiger 9, dairy cattle 65,000 and crops harmed worth about Tk 9.41 billion.
1991 (29 April) The Incomparable Violent wind of 1991, crossed the Bangladesh drift amid the night. It began in the Pacific around 6,000 km away and took 20 days to achieve the bank of Bangladesh. It had a measurement of more than the span of Bangladesh. The focal cloudy cloud had a distance across surpassing 600 km. The most extreme breeze speed saw at Sandwip was 225 km/hr. The breeze speeds recorded at better places were as per the following: Chittagong 160 km/hr, Khepupara (Kalapara) 180 km/hr, Kutubdia 180 km/hr, Cox's Bazar 185 km/hr, and Bhola 178 km/hr. The greatest breeze speed assessed from NOAA-11 satellite picture got at 13:38 hours on 29 April was around 240 km/hr. The violent wind was recognized as a misery (wind speed not surpassing 62 km/hr) on the 23rd April first in the satellite picture taken at SPARRSO from NOAA-11 and GMS-4 satellites. It transformed into a cyclonic tempest on 25 April. The tornado in its underlying stage moved somewhat northwest and afterward north. From 28 April it began moving in a north-easterly bearing and crossed the Bangladesh drift north of Chittagong port amid the evening of the 29th April. The violent wind began influencing the beach front islands like Nijhum Dwip, Manpura, Bhola and Sandwip from the night of that day. The most extreme tempest flood tallness amid this tornado was assessed to be around 5 to 8m. The death toll and property was titanic. The loss of property was evaluated at Tk 60 billion. The loss of life was assessed at 150,000; cattlehead slaughtered 70,000.
1991 (31 May to 2 June) Seaward islands and scorches of Patuakhali, Barisal, Noakhali and Chittagong; cyclonic tempest, most extreme breeze speed 110 km/hr and flood tallness of 1.9m; individuals murdered, cattlehead died, vessels lost and standing products pulverized.
1994 (29 April 3 May) Seaward island and scorches of Cox's Bazar; serious cyclonic tempest with most extreme breeze speed of 210 km/hr; individuals executed around 400, steers lost around 8,000.
1995 (21-25 November) Seaward island and singes of Cox's Bazar; serious cyclonic tempest with greatest breeze speed of 210 km/hr; around 650 individuals slaughtered, 17,000 cattlehead died.
1997 (16-19 May) Seaward islands and scorches of Chittagong, Cox's Bazar, Noakhali and Bhola; serious cyclonic tempest (tropical storm) with a breeze speed of 225 km/hr, storm flood of 3.05m (comparable quality to that of 1970 tornado); just 126 individuals slaughtered due to better fiasco administration measures taken by the legislature and the general population.
1997 (25-27 September) Seaward islands and singes of Chittagong, Cox's Bazar, Noakhali and Bhola; serious cyclonic tempest (sea tempest) with a breeze speed of 150 km/hr, storm flood of 1.83 to 3.05m.
1998 (16-20 May) Seaward islands and singes of Chittagong, Cox's Bazar and Noakhali; extreme cyclonic tempest (sea tempest) with a breeze speed of 150 km/hr, storm flood of 1.83 to 2.44m.
1998 (19-22 November) Seaward islands and roasts of Khulna, Barisal and Patuakhali; cyclonic tempest with most extreme breeze speed of 90 km/hr, storm flood of 1.22 to 2.44m.
2007 (15-17 November) Serious cyclonic tempest 'Sidr' causes gigantic harm in southern piece of Bangladesh; around 3000 people slaughtered.
2009 (19-21 April) Violent wind 'Bijli' assaulted pitifully in Bangladesh and not all that extreme harms were recorded with the exception of a few houses and harvest fields misfortunes.
2009 (27-29 May) A serious cyclonic tempest 'Aila' assaulted seaward 15 areas of south-western piece of Bangladesh;' around 150 people executed, 2 lac houses and 3 lac sections of land of developed land and products misfortunes.
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