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Typhoon Nanmadol and Other Storms Kill Close to 1,000 in Philippines; Taiwan may be Next Philippines (HDW) December 3, 2004 - Powerful Typhoon Nanmadol was preparing to make landfall in the Philippines on December 2, 2004, over the already battered Aurora province. Over the past two weeks, Luzon, the main island in the Philippines, has been lashed with three tropical storms. Typhoon Nanmadol is the fourth storm to hit. The toll from the first three storms, the most recent of which was Monday, is well over 1,000 with 479 dead and 560 missing, according to multiple news sources. Many of the deaths occurred along Luzon’s east coast where floods and landslides buried three towns. Nanmadol’s effects were already being felt over Luzon’s east coast late on December 2, and many fear that the storm will make the situation worse. The government of the Philippines has already requested international aid to meet the needs of those whose homes were destroyed.
The above picture, processed by NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, shows Typhoon Nanmadol at around noon time in Manila, the capital of the Philippines. At that time, the storm had sustained winds of 240 kilometers per hour (150 mph) with gusts up to 296 kph (184 mph). Later in the day, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) reported that the storm’s winds had slowed to 204 kph (127 mph) with gusts to 250 kph (155 mph). The storm is expected to move northwest over the Philippines, then turn northeast over Taiwan.
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