Ivor crossed the coast near Princess Charlotte Bay. There was some structural damage to sheds and light damage to the main buildings in Coen. There was evidence of a tornado track from a swath of damaged trees 100m wide extending as far as the eye could see 40 km south of Coen.

David Ambrose was on board the vessel Mustique, which encountered sustained winds of 114.5 knots (maximum reading on the anemometer). They spent the period steaming between Flinders and Stanley Islands in Princess Charlotte Bay.

David Curnock, a dentist in Cairns was one of the crew and he recalled the ship's barometer falling to 928hPa. The windward side of trees were stripped of bark. There was extensive damage to Coral along the coast. The cyclone retained its identity as a monsoonal low and moved through the eastern Gulf and back down the east coast with heavy rain south of its centre.

As it moved down the Central Coast unofficial 24 hr falls of 1000mm were reported near Yeppoon and this caused flash flooding and extensive damage in the Yeppoon area. 572.4mm in 24h to 9am 27 Mar at Pacific Heights Yeppoon.

The map at the top left displays the impact area (marked by the black line) with the red line illustrating the path of the eye of the cyclone.

Cyclone Ivor 1990: infrared satellite image 19 March

Rockhampton Regional Council in partnership with the Queensland a…

Cyclone Ivor track and intensity (BOM)

Cyclone Ivor 1990: mean sea level 18 March