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19 August 2021 | dataset

Effects of typhoon pamela on the coral reefs of Guam

Guam, the southernmost island of the Mariana Islands, is likely to encounter a significant typhoon every seven years. During the last thirty years two typhoons have passed directly over Guam—Karen (11 November 1962) and Pamela (21 May 1976). Pamela had maximum winds of 120 kt (145 estimated), minimum sea level pressure of 930 mb, a speed of movement at 7 kt, a diameter of 20 nautical miles, and 33 inches of rainfall during the typhoon passage. The typhoon had its greatest effect along the shoreline where erosion removed many bands of beach deposits and where shoreline vegetation was defoliated. Relatively little damage occurred along the adjacent reef-flat platforms
and reef margins. Some unconsolidated materials were shifted. The growing tips of some foliaceous corals fragmented. On the reef front a number of corals were overturned by the storm waves.

Available online

Call Number: [EL]

Physical Description: 7 Pages

Data and Resource

Field Value
Publisher University of Guam
Modified 27 August 2021
Release Date 19 August 2021
Source URL https://library.sprep.org/content/effects-typhoon-pamela-coral-reefs-guam
Identifier VL-34800
Spatial / Geographical Coverage Location SPREP LIBRARY
Relevant Countries
License Public
[Open Data]
Author Randall Richard H / Eldredge Lucius G
Contact Name SPREP Records and Archives Officer
Contact Email [email protected]