Massive
Typhoon Bolaven slams Okinawa, heads for Koreas
By the CNN Wire Staff
August 26, 2012 --
Updated 2105 GMT (0505 HKT)
Typhoon Bolaven is
expected to make landfall near Okinawa on Sunday.
Tokyo (CNN) -- A massive typhoon crossed over Okinawa on Sunday, bringing
winds more ferocious than even the typhoon-weary Japanese island has seen in
decades.
Typhoon Bolaven, with
wind gusts that reached as high as 259 kilometers per hour (161 mph), is the
strongest to strike the region in nearly 50 years. And with a cloud field of
2,000 kilometers (1,250 miles), it is 20 times larger than Okinawa's length.
"It's been very,
very severe," said storm chaser James Reynolds, who was on the
northwestern coast of the island during the worst of the storm.
Tree branches were flying through the air amid torrential rain, he said.
Speaking to CNN early Monday
morning on Okinawa, Reynolds said, "It's been a long and rough
night."
"The eye of the
typhoon actually crashed ashore just after dark. ... Like the rest of the
population we all just kind of holed up in the strong and sturdy buildings
which make up Okinawa," he said.
The infrastructure on
Okinawa is designed to withstand violent storms. "Everything's made of
solid concrete," said Reynolds.
The last storm of this
scale was Typhoon Naha in 1956.
At 3 a.m. Monday local
time (2 p.m. ET Sunday), Bolaven had winds of 194 kilometers per hour, with
gusts at 240 kilometers per hour, CNN International meteorologist Jennifer
Delgado reported.
Bolaven could make
landfall at the Korean peninsula on Tuesday morning, or potentially in South
Korea on Monday night, Delgado said.
In the meantime,
rainfall totals in Okinawa could top 500 mm (20 inches) in 24 hours, said CNN
International meteorologist Tom Sater.
Bolaven is "roughly
the size of France to Poland in land mass," said Sater.
Storm surges were
expected to be a major problem for Okinawa. More than 400,000 people in the
area live at elevations less than 50 meters (164 feet).
"The large
battering waves on both sides of Okinawa are going to be a threat to people
living near the water," Reynolds predicted. "But I think the worst
has passed now. The storm is moving away and unfortunately it's the people in
the Korean peninsula who look like they've got to prepare for the incoming
storm."
Taiwan, meanwhile, could
be in for a pounding due to something called the Fujiwhara effect.
Typhoon Tembin made
landfall in southern Taiwan a few days ago, and was expected to work its way
toward Hong Kong. But Bolaven, which is much stronger, has stopped Tembin's
movement toward Hong Kong and has been spinning it around. Tembin is likely to
make a second landfall in southern Taiwan, also on Tuesday morning.
"As Typhoon Bolaven
moves northward towards the Yellow Sea, it will drag Tembin toward the China
coast very near Shanghai," said Sater. "That's an amazing change in
direction."
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