TY - JOUR
T1 - Field surveys and numerical modeling of the August 2016 Typhoon Lionrock along the northeastern coast of Japan
T2 - the first typhoon making landfall in Tohoku region
AU - Heidarzadeh, Mohammad
AU - Iwamoto, Takumu
AU - Takagawa, Tomohiro
AU - Takagi, Hiroshi
N1 - Funding Information:
The tide gauge records and the astronomical tidal levels are provided by the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA). We also used JMA best track database for the tropical storms/typhoons affecting Japan since 1951. The GMT software was employed for drafting some of the figures (Wessel and Smith 1998). We acknowledge Kamaishi port authorities for providing some storm damage photographs shown in one of our figures. We are sincerely grateful to Professor James Goff (the Editor-in-Chief) and two anonymous reviewers for their constructive review comments which greatly helped to improve this article. MH was supported by the Brunel University London through the Brunel Research Initiative and Enterprise Fund 2017/18 (BUL BRIEF). HT was supported by grants to Tokyo Institute of Technology from the JSPS KAKENHI (No. 16KK0121).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020, The Author(s).
PY - 2021/1
Y1 - 2021/1
N2 - Typhoon Lionrock, also known as the national number 1610 in Japan, caused severe flooding in east Japan in August 28–31, 2016, leaving a death toll of 22. With a maximum sustained wind speed of ~ 220 km/h from the Joint Typhoon Warning Center’s best track, Lionrock was classified as a category 4 hurricane in Saffir–Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale and as a typhoon in Japan Meteorological Agency’s scale. Lionrock was among unique typhoons as it started its landfall from north of Japan. Here, we studied the characteristics of this typhoon through tide gauge data analysis, field surveys and numerical modeling. Tide gauge analysis showed that the surges generated by Lionrock were in the ranges of 15–55 cm with surge duration of 0.8–3.1 days. Our field surveys revealed that the damage to coastal communities/structures was moderate although it caused severe flooding inland. We measured a maximum coastal wave runup of 4.3 m in Iwaisaki. Such a runup was smaller than that generated by other category 4 typhoons hitting Japan in the past. Our numerical model was able to reproduce the storm surge generated by the 2016 Typhoon Lionrock. This validated numerical model can be used in the future for typhoon-hazard studies along the coast of northeastern Japan. Despite relatively small surge/wave runups in coastal areas, Lionrock’s death toll was more than that of some other category 4 typhoons. We attribute this to various primary (e.g., flooding, surges, waves, strong winds) and secondary (e.g., landslides, coastal erosions, debris flows, wind-blown debris) mechanisms and their combinations and interactions that contribute to damage/death during a typhoon event.
AB - Typhoon Lionrock, also known as the national number 1610 in Japan, caused severe flooding in east Japan in August 28–31, 2016, leaving a death toll of 22. With a maximum sustained wind speed of ~ 220 km/h from the Joint Typhoon Warning Center’s best track, Lionrock was classified as a category 4 hurricane in Saffir–Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale and as a typhoon in Japan Meteorological Agency’s scale. Lionrock was among unique typhoons as it started its landfall from north of Japan. Here, we studied the characteristics of this typhoon through tide gauge data analysis, field surveys and numerical modeling. Tide gauge analysis showed that the surges generated by Lionrock were in the ranges of 15–55 cm with surge duration of 0.8–3.1 days. Our field surveys revealed that the damage to coastal communities/structures was moderate although it caused severe flooding inland. We measured a maximum coastal wave runup of 4.3 m in Iwaisaki. Such a runup was smaller than that generated by other category 4 typhoons hitting Japan in the past. Our numerical model was able to reproduce the storm surge generated by the 2016 Typhoon Lionrock. This validated numerical model can be used in the future for typhoon-hazard studies along the coast of northeastern Japan. Despite relatively small surge/wave runups in coastal areas, Lionrock’s death toll was more than that of some other category 4 typhoons. We attribute this to various primary (e.g., flooding, surges, waves, strong winds) and secondary (e.g., landslides, coastal erosions, debris flows, wind-blown debris) mechanisms and their combinations and interactions that contribute to damage/death during a typhoon event.
KW - Field surveys
KW - Hurricane
KW - Japan
KW - Numerical simulations
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - Storm surge
KW - Typhoon Lionrock
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85086718722&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11069-020-04112-7
DO - 10.1007/s11069-020-04112-7
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85086718722
VL - 105
SP - 1
EP - 19
JO - Natural Hazards
JF - Natural Hazards
SN - 0921-030X
IS - 1
ER -