This Article is From Mar 19, 2015

Northern Australia Battens Down for Cyclone

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File Photo: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) taken by the JMA MTSAT-2 satellite at 0330Z on March 11, 2015 shows Tropical Cyclone Nathan moving northeast of Cooktown, Queensland on March 12, 2015. (AFP)

Sydney:

Northeastern Australia was battening down today in preparation for a strong cyclone forecast to hit coastal areas north of the city of Cairns, one of the gateways for the Great Barrier Reef.

Tropical Cyclone Nathan, currently a category three storm, was tracking back towards the Cooktown area, some 260 kilometres (160 miles) from popular tourist destination Cairns, having threatened the coast last week before moving out to sea.

It was expected to make landfall as a category four on Friday morning, packing wind gusts of up to 230 kilometres per hour (142 mph), the Bureau of Meteorology said.

"Not all residents will receive category four or category three-strength winds, but if you are in the warning zone it's important to continue or commence your preparations now if you have not already started," said Rob Webb, the bureau's Queensland director.

"This includes using daylight hours to secure boats and property."

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Cooktown has a population of around 2,500 and Queensland's State Disaster Management Committee was due to meet in Brisbane on Thursday to review emergency plans.

Nathan arrives on the heels of Super Cyclone Pam that devastated neighbouring Vanuatu last Friday and follows two fierce storms that hit northern Australia within hours of each other in February.

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The first, Tropical Cyclone Lam, smashed remote communities in the Northern Territory while Marcia, a maximum category five tempest, tore through the east of Queensland, wrecking hundreds of homes and cutting electricity to tens of thousands.

Cyclones, which are common in northeastern Australia, range from one to five in strength, with five the most severe.
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