According to BOM's Climate Education website.

Tropical cyclones                                             

Tropical cyclones are possibly the most feared of the weather phenomena to affect Australia. From the earliest days of settlement in tropical Australia, their destructive winds (gusts approaching 300km/h), torrential rains (approaching one metre of rain within 24 hours), storm surges, and wild seas have inflicted a heavy toll on communities and travellers in their paths. As they move into higher latitudes or track inland, they lose contact with the warm tropical oceans necessary to sustain them, and weaken; but even weakening storms can be highly disruptive, flooding the inland and buffeting communities. On the other hand, tropical cyclones bestow upon many parts of northern Australia a significant proportion of their annual rainfall.

A maritime peril

Cyclones' chief fury is expended over the tropical coastal regions and adjacent oceans. The worst ever cyclone-related disaster in Australia's history occurred in March 1899, when over 300 people were killed in what became known as the Bathurst Bay Hurricane. Some were victims of a sudden rise in sea-level near the eye of the cyclone - known as a storm surge - that swept across low-lying land. Most of the remainder died when some 100 pearling vessels were destroyed. Early in the 20th Century, cyclones extracted a heavy toll at sea, as large vessels were lost with all on board. But while cyclones will always have the potential to take lives, heavy death tolls are now less likely in Australia thanks to the watchful eye of satellites, and enhanced warning and communication capabilities.

Cyclone definition and frequency

A tropical cyclone is a tropical depression of sufficient intensity to produce sustained gale force winds (at least 63 km/h). A "severe tropical cyclone" produces sustained hurricane force winds (at least 118 km/h). Severe tropical cyclones correspond to the hurricanes or typhoons of other parts of the world. In the average cyclone season, 10 tropical cyclones develop over Australian waters, of which six cross the coast, mostly over northwestern Australia (between Exmouth and Broome), and northeast Queensland (between about Mossman and Maryborough). Considerable year-to-year variability in cyclone numbers occurs: from virtually none, to as many as 16 in 1963. There is a tendency for tropical cyclones in Australian waters to be less common in El Niño summers, and more common in La Niña summers, due to changes in broadscale wind patterns and water temperatures during such events. However there is evidence that the frequency of severe cyclone impacts in northwestern Australia may be similar in El Niño and La Niña years.

Naming the beast

The practice of naming cyclones, first introduced by the colourful Queensland Government Meteorologist Clement Wragge in the late 19th Century, lapsed with his retirement in 1902, but was re-introduced by the Bureau of Meteorology in1963. For this reason the first few cyclones described in this section, which occurred prior to the 1960s, had no name. Initially, cyclones were given female names, but in keeping with the spirit of "equal opportunity" that emerged in the 1970s, Australian cyclones were allocated both male and female names from 1975.

 

Case Studies

Cyclone

Cyclone

January 1918
Cyclone Althea

Cyclone Althea

December 1971
Cyclone Larry

Cyclone Larry

March 2006
Cyclone Yasi

Cyclone Yasi

February 2011