On 25 December the Australian Bureau of Meteorology reported that a broad monsoonal circulation that they had been monitoring to the northwest of Western Australia had developed a discrete centre of circulation.[1] Over the next few days the system slowly developed further as it moved towards the south-southwest, before during 28 December the BoM reported that the system had developed into a category 1 tropical cyclone on the Australian tropical cyclone intensity scale and named it Christine.[1][2]
It intensified into a Category 2 storm on 29 December, Category 3 on 30 December, and then a marginal Category 4 on the same day. Watches and warnings were issued for areas between Derby and Exmouth, extending inland beyond the Pilbara to the Mid West and Goldfields-Esperance region around Wiluna and Leinster.
Christine made landfall between Roebourne and Whim Creek while strengthening around midnight on 31 December, with the eye passing through Roebourne itself, with Wickham skirting the edge of the eye. The storm began to turn to the southeast and began to weaken slowly.
Impact
Western Australia
Upon making landfall, Christine produced heavy rainfall across a large section of the West Australian Pilbara. In Roebourne, a total of 134.2 mm (5.28 in) was recorded by a rain gauge before the instrument failed, while the maximum daily precipitation total of 168 mm (6.6 in) was observed in Abydos North. Additionally, Port Hedland recorded 123.2 mm (4.85 in), Karratha 112.8 mm (4.44 in), while thunderstorms along Christine's outer bands produced three-day totals of 181.8 mm (7.16 in) in Broome and 137.2 mm (5.40 in) in Lagrange Bay. All mining and shipping operations were cancelled in Port Hedland, however no actual damage to mining infrastructure was reported.[3] Roebourne and Wickham bore the brunt of Christine's winds, with a maximum confirmed gust of 172 km/h (107 mph) recorded at Roebourne.[4] Both towns received significant damage and according to many local residents of Wickham, Christine was the worst cyclone in recent memory; several roofs were significantly damaged and many of the towns trees were uprooted and destroyed.[5] In Roebourne, roofs of many houses collapsed under the weight of water or were ripped off by wind gusts, while the whole town lost electricity for a short period.[5] Karratha and Port Hedland were spared any major damage, apart from minor flooding and wind-related damage. As Christine moved inland, flooding closed the Great Northern Highway north of Newman, however the town itself received 70 km/h (43 mph) wind gusts and only 25.0 mm (0.98 in) of rain.
An estimated 3–4.5 tonnes of iron ore was lost in exports across the Pilbara region due to Christine. Mining operations and shipments were suspended for three days, though most of the facilities sustained only minor damage if any.[6] Despite the storm, Port Hedland reported a record monthly export of 29.9 million tonnes in December 2013, with 28.5 million tonnes being iron ore. This surpassed the previous record set in September 2013 by roughly 300,000 tonnes.[7]
Elsewhere
As the remnant low of Christine moved south-eastwards and into South Australia, it combined with a thermal low whipping up gusty winds and causing extreme heat across central Australia. Moomba recorded a maximum of 49.3 °C (120.7 °F) on the 2 of January, almost beating its former record high set the year before.[8] 70 km/h (43 mph) winds combined with the heat caused catastrophic fire dangers across the southern inland and a complete fire ban was issued for South Australia.[8] As the extreme heat moved east, temperatures of 48.7 °C (119.7 °F)[9] were recorded in Birdsville, Queensland and 49.1 °C (120.4 °F) in Walgett, New South Wales.[10] Further south however, Christine's remnants caused light showers and a cooler change in the Adelaide area, while isolated thunderstorms caused 42.8 mm (1.69 in) of rain to fall in Eucla, more than triple the areas monthly average.[11]Victoria and southern New South Wales also recorded light rain and a cooler change from Christine's remnants, with Melbourne reporting 4.8 mm (0.19 in) and maximum temperatures in the low 20 °C's during the New Years period.[12]
The name Christine was replaced with Catherine in 2014, but the name has not been confirmed as retired.
Cyclone Veronica - the next severe tropical cyclone to impact the Pilbara coast, though it did not make landfall.
Cyclone Damien - the next severe tropical cyclone to make landfall on the Pilbara coast
References
^ abWestern Australian Regional Office (January 2014). Severe Tropical Cyclone Christine (Report). Australian Bureau of Meteorology. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 26 October 2014.
^Keith Tan (2 January 2014). "Cyclone Christine dents W. Australia ore exports". Vol. 8. Platts SBB Steel Markets Daily. p. 1. – via Lexis Nexis (subscription required)
^Paul Garvey (9 January 2014). "Cyclone defied as port hits record high for ore exports". The Australian. p. 14. – via Lexis Nexis (subscription required)