2010
DOI: 10.1007/s00703-010-0059-y
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Tropical cyclones in the SW Indian Ocean. Part 2: structure and impacts at the event scale

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Cited by 16 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…This organization does not currently maintain a website in French or English or disseminate any information related to storm surge. However, several peer‐reviewed journal articles provide some details about surge observations and impacts on the island, such as Naeera and Jury [] and Chang‐Seng and Jury [].…”
Section: Southwest Indian Oceanmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This organization does not currently maintain a website in French or English or disseminate any information related to storm surge. However, several peer‐reviewed journal articles provide some details about surge observations and impacts on the island, such as Naeera and Jury [] and Chang‐Seng and Jury [].…”
Section: Southwest Indian Oceanmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A modeling analysis of three tropical separate cyclones in early 1994 estimates that each storm produced storm surge elevations of at least 4 m, with combined surge and wave setup elevations reaching 5 m in each event [ Naeraa and Jury , ]. Peak surge levels may have reached 6 m, while waves that inundated the coast may have reached 10 m on Madagascar during that catastrophic cyclone season [ Naeraa and Jury , ; Chang‐Seng and Jury , ]. However, independent observations are not available to validate these modeling results.…”
Section: Southwest Indian Oceanmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For instance a higher total TC rain (Figure b) was associated with a more widespread TC activity (Figure c) for 2003 (that is 2002–2003 South‐West Indian Ocean cyclone season). This was in contrast to 2004 that had three times the normalized TC rain (Figure d) due to the impact of two very intense TCs (Elita and Gafilo) that made landfall and rotated over Madagascar in early 2004 [ Chang‐Seng and Jury , ]. The largest AI was for 2000 when the TC Leon‐Eline (1999–2000 SWIO TC season) crossed the entire Indian Ocean and traveled far inland impacting Mozambique, Zimbabwe, and South Africa.…”
Section: Annual and Monthly Variability Of Tc Contribution For 1998–2009mentioning
confidence: 99%