Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Responsive image


1934 Muroto typhoon

1934 Muroto typhoon
Surface weather analysis of the typhoon near Japan on September 21
Meteorological history
FormedSeptember 13, 1934
ExtratropicalSeptember 21, 1934
DissipatedSeptember 25, 1934
Typhoon
10-minute sustained (JMA)
Highest winds150 km/h (90 mph)
Highest gusts235 km/h (145 mph)
Lowest pressure911.9 hPa (mbar); 26.93 inHg
(Record lowest for landfalling storm in mainland Japan)
Overall effects
Fatalities3,066 total
Damage≥$300 million (1934 USD)
Areas affectedJapan, Alaska
IBTrACSEdit this at Wikidata

Part of the 1934 Pacific typhoon season

In September 1934, a violent typhoon caused tremendous devastation in Japan, leaving more than 3,000 people dead in its wake. Dubbed the Muroto typhoon (室戸台風, Muroto Taifū),[1] the system was first identified on September 13 over the western Federated States of Micronesia. Moving generally northwest, it eventually brushed the Ryukyu Islands on September 20. Turning northeast, the typhoon accelerated and struck Shikoku and southern Honshu the following morning. It made landfalls in Muroto, Kaifu, Awaji Island, and Kobe. A pressure of 911.9 hPa (26.93 inHg) was observed in Muroto, making the typhoon the strongest ever recorded to impact Japan at the time. This value was also the lowest land-based pressure reading in the world on record at the time; however, it was surpassed the following year during the 1935 Labor Day hurricane. After clearing Japan, the now extratropical storm traveled east and weakened. Turning north by September 24, the system deepened and impacted the Aleutian Islands; it was last noted the following day over western Alaska.

Regarded at the time as the "second-greatest catastrophe of modern Japan" after the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake, the storm left parts of Osaka in ruins. Tens of thousands of structures were damaged or destroyed, leaving approximately 200,000 people homeless. Among the 3,066 people killed were 421 children and teachers who perished when their flimsy schools were destroyed. This ranked it, at the time, as the deadliest typhoon in Japanese history. In addition to the fatalities, 13,184 people were injured. Total damage exceeded $300 million (1934 USD).

  1. ^ Hatsuo Ishizaki (October 15, 1965). "The Distributions of Damaged Houses and Strong Winds by Typhoons" (PDF). Bulletin of the Disaster Prevention Research Institute. 15 (86). Kyoto University. Retrieved January 18, 2016.

Previous Page Next Page






Typhon Muroto de 1934 French 室戸台風 Japanese 무로토 태풍 Korean Bão Muroto (1934) VI 室戶颱風 Chinese

Responsive image

Responsive image