Dinah caused severe damage at Heron Island initially from inundation from large NE swells and a day later from winds. It recurved and passed over Sandy Cape which recorded a central pressure of 944.8 hPa and high water 10 metres above normal. Although well off the coast many trees were blown down from Rockhampton to Grafton. Houses were unroofed at Bundaberg, Maryborough and along the Sunshine and Gold Coasts.

Huge seas and storm surge caused severe erosion at Emu Park, Yeppoon, and in the Maryborough Bundaberg area. At Bargara winds tore off a large section of roofing from a unit in Clarke Street and a number of other houses suffered damage. A 75 foot tower was blown over. At Burnett Heads the sea crossed beach front roads and flooded low lying properties. The Catholic Church had most of its roof torn off.

A storm surge of 2 metres covered the flats inland from Double Island Point and a storm surge inundated cane farms at Bli Bli on the Sunshine Coast and was knee deep in Hastings St Noosa. Around Sandgate seawater 1.5 metres deep came into houses. More than one hundred homes were flooded and at Cribb Island one house was washed into the sea.

At nearby Nudgee beach the sea wall was destroyed and houses were flooded with 0.66 metres of salt water. Storm surge also affected the Gold Coast and water lapped the decking of the Jubilee Bridge which is about 1.5 metres above highest astronomical tide. A similar storm occurred on the Tweed River isolating Fingal. A section of the esplanade collapsed at Surfers Paradise and the unprecedented 1967 severe erosion on the Gold Coast had begun. Four other tropical cyclones continued the erosion which culminated with three east coast lows in June 1967.

Interview with Jeff Callaghan Weather Expert

Rockhampton Regional Council in partnership with the Queensland a…

Retired Senior BOM Forecaster Jeff Callaghan on Cyclone Dinah and…

Gold Coast - then and now

Potential Cyclone Damage

Mean sea level pressure cyclone Dinah approaching QLD

Jan 1967 embedded eye east of Brisbane

Cyclone Dinah, 1967: satellite photo on morning of 28 Jan

Cyclone Dinah, 1967: mean sea level 29 Jan

Location of Heron Island and track of Cyclone Dinah.