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Cyclone’s Cyclone Tracy By Mikayla Natural disasters

Cyclone’s Cyclone Tracy By Mikayla Natural disasters

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Page 1: Cyclone’s Cyclone Tracy By Mikayla Natural disasters

Cyclone’s Cyclone Tracy

By Mikayla

Natural disasters

Page 2: Cyclone’s Cyclone Tracy By Mikayla Natural disasters

Secrets of cyclones Cyclone Tracy was a tropical cyclone that devastated the city of Darwin.

it all began from Christmas EVE,

to Christmas day 1974, Tracy killed 71 people, caused $837 million in damage and destroyed

more than 70 percent of Darwin's buildings, including 80 percent of houses. Tracy left more than 41,000 people homeless

out of the 47,000 inhabitants of the city prior to landfall and required the evacuation of over 30,000 people.

Most of Darwin's population was evacuated to Adelaide,

Whyalla (south Australia), Alice Springs and Sydney and many never returned to the city.

The next six hours Tracy destroyed Darwin and killed 65 people - 49 on land, and 16 at sea.

Page 3: Cyclone’s Cyclone Tracy By Mikayla Natural disasters

More cyclone secrets

• We are now organising a cyclone emergency kit containing a radio with batteries and fresh water!

• When cyclone Tracy came it was a day before Christmas so all the presents were demolished ,so when it came to Christmas time plenty of people did not have presents let alone a house!!!!!!!

• There is not enough research to say that climate change has made a difference to cyclones

Page 4: Cyclone’s Cyclone Tracy By Mikayla Natural disasters

Did you know ???????

Cyclone Tracy was Australia's most destructive cyclone in terms of damage to houses and buildings. Cyclone Tracy extended 48 kilometres from the centre and was the most compact system worldwide until 2008.

In the Southern hemisphere cyclones spin in a clockwise direction and in the Northern hemisphere they spin in an anti-clockwise direction.

The centre of the cyclone which is called the eye is totally still. Cyclones are becoming less common but more intense !!!!!

Twenty-five thousand people were evacuated out of the city by air and 10,000 left by road.

Page 5: Cyclone’s Cyclone Tracy By Mikayla Natural disasters

Different cyclones

•Cyclone Larry•Cyclone ului (QLD)•Cyclone Tomas •Cyclone tracy •Cyclone Thomas (Fiji)

Page 6: Cyclone’s Cyclone Tracy By Mikayla Natural disasters

Some more cyclone facts

• Cyclone Mahina, hit north Queensland 4 of March 1899, was a category 5 cyclone, and resulted in the greatest death toll of any natural disaster in Australia.

Category 1 - gales with gusts to 125 km/h Category 2 - destructive winds with gusts of 125 to 170 km/h Category 3 - very destructive winds with gusts of 170 to 225 km/h Category 4 - very destructive winds with gusts of 225 to 280 km/hCategory 5 - very destructive winds with gusts exceeding 280 km/h

Page 7: Cyclone’s Cyclone Tracy By Mikayla Natural disasters

Remembering

The warning comes as the city remembers the 30th anniversary of Cyclone Tracy.

Around about thirty years ago, Cyclone Tracy struck the small town of Darwin.

People in Darwin still do a minuets silence at Christmas eve at the time cyclone Tracy started at 10 pm.

Page 8: Cyclone’s Cyclone Tracy By Mikayla Natural disasters

Explaining cyclones • When the hot air rises, cooler air rushes in to fill the area left vacant by the hot air. • The effect of the Earth spinning on its axis causes the air to spiral upwards with • considerable force. This in turn causes the winds to rotate faster, causing the tropical

low • to deepen in intensity into a tropical depression, and eventually a cyclone which is

anywhere • between hundreds of kilometres to thousands of kilometres wide.

• Cyclones are also affected by strong winds, yet in their centre is a clear, calm region • called the 'eye'. When the cyclone continues its course, and the winds return from

the other • direction, they may seem to be more violent. The winds are not just rotating; there is

also• the effect of the warmer air continually rising and cold air rushing in. That is why the • winds are so strong, and seem to move in all directions.

Page 9: Cyclone’s Cyclone Tracy By Mikayla Natural disasters

Bibliography

• http://www.freebase.com/view/en/cyclone_tracy• www.Google.com • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclone_Tracy• http://clearlyexplained.com/nature/earth/disasters/cyclon

es.html#how• http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_are_ten_facts_about_cy

clones• http://www.ntlib.nt.gov.au/tracy/advanced/xmas_eve.html • http://library.thinkquest.org/03oct/01027/cyclone.jpg • http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/03/18/2849

589.htm• http://www.abc.net.au/pm/content/2010/s2827042.ht

m

Page 10: Cyclone’s Cyclone Tracy By Mikayla Natural disasters

Thank you for watching!!!!!

• By Mikayla