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Cyclone Ingrid near peak intensity

Welcome to WikiProject Tropical cyclones, a WikiProject to systematically organize all the information in Wikipedia related to tropical cyclones (also known as hurricanes or typhoons). This project's focus is to centralize the efforts of many Wikipedians to make Wikipedia the best free resource when it comes to information about the subject.

If you want to help, feel free to look at the project's noticeboard, the
to do list, the #wiki-hurricanes IRC channel, or this talk page.

Scope

This WikiProject aims to provide a common layout for articles on historical tropical cyclones, which includes tropical cyclone articles for individual storms (e.g., Hurricane Charley or 1970 Bhola cyclone), as well as seasonal basin articles (e.g. 2004 Atlantic hurricane season), and articles that are required as a framework for those articles (e.g. Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale, tropical cyclone).

Goals

To provide an encyclopediac overview for tropical cyclones, including individual storms, historical warning of cyclones, and the structure of a cyclone.

Parentage

The parent of this project is WikiProject Meteorology.

This project is partially inspired by:

There is currently only one portal for the topic. (What is a portal?)

Template:Tcportal


Sister Project Searches

Participants


This user participates in
WikiProject Tropical cyclones.
Add {{User WPTC}} to your
userpage to add this userbox.

Inactive members of the WikiProject

This section is for users who are inactive in this Wikiproject; these users may change their status at any time, if they wish.


Former members of the WikiProject

This section is for users who are no longer part of this WikiProject.

  1. Holderca1 - Left the WPTC early on November 10 ,2005.
  2. Hurricane Devon - Indefinitely blocked.
  3. User:Aeon1006- Left Wikipedia and removed himself from the list of participants. Later returned to Wikipedia, but not the project.
  4. Gertzy - Left on October 7, 2006 for unknown reasons.
  5. Sunholm - Indefinitely blocked.
  6. Tijuana Brass - Taking a break from Wikipedia for the time being.
  7. Funnybunny - Left wikipedia.
  8. Sarsaparilla39 - Taking a break from Wikipedia for the time being.
  9. RacoonFox - Indefinitely blocked due to account compromization.
  10. Counters - Left wikipedia
  11. VortexGuy - Left wikipedia
  12. Chacor - Left wikipedia
  13. DanielES15 - Left wikipedia on August 7, 2007 [1]
  14. Storm Boy - presumably left wikipedia, no edits since 2006.
  15. WeatherVane - presumably left wikipedia, no edits since July 2006.
  16. Hurricane-Inu - presumably left wikipedia, no edits since 2006.
  17. Rcnj - left wikipedia.
  18. Alastor Moody - left wikipedia
  19. Jaranda - left wikipedia
  20. Good Kitty - left wikipedia
  21. Miracle55star - left wikipedia
  22. Cyclone1 - left wikipedia.
  23. Slyspace - left WPTC.
  24. Coredesat - left Wikipedia

General guidelines

Templates will provide a useful set of features to show information on tropical cyclones and seasons in a consistent format. Guidelines for naming, links, and categorization help keep the vast number of articles properly interconnected.

Basins

Tropical cyclones are separated by basin. Generally each basin has its own categories; all articles for a particular basin are inter-woven using links and categories. It's important that the basin is listed identically (including capitalization) for all articles. The basin is generally passed in to templates to automatically create categorizations and links within an article.

The basins include:

Templates

A number of templates exist to make life easier for tropical cyclone article writers. For a complete list, see Category:Hurricane templates.

Categories

Categorizing all articles consistently makes it easier for readers to navigate through related articles. The top-level category Category:Tropical cyclones should be reserved for a few select meteorological articles; most articles should be categories into several of the sub-categories therein.

Images

To make uploading and categorization easier, season and storm articles should have consistent types of images and those images should have consistent names.

  • If you create storm track map using Jdorje's track map generator, try to upload it to Commons and tag it with {{hurricane auto track map}}.
  • Storm peak-intensity visible-light pictures. Most storms have a satellite picture of the storm at peak intensity. Higher resolution is always better.
  • Storm landfall visible-light pictures. Other storms have a satellite picture of the storm at landfall. Again higher resolution is always better.
  • Non-visible-light storm images. Many storms may have IR, doppler, or other types of meteorological pictures.

Article guidelines

Storm articles

Example articles: Hurricane Mitch, Hurricane Floyd

Naming

  • Hurricanes should only receive a separate article if they are long enough not to be considered a stub. If there isn't enough to write about, the text can go inside the article for the hurricane season.
  • When creating a new article for an active storm when it may or may not be appropriate (i.e. a major hurricane currently threatening land), it is generally best to put a request up in the discussion forum for that hurricane season (e.g. Talk:2006 Atlantic hurricane season) and discuss it with others.
  • Named hurricanes generally do not have unique names. A storm that has had its name retired may take its name for the main article (e.g., Hurricane Charley, Tropical Storm Allison, Cyclone Tracy); use the prefix appropriate for the tropical cyclone's basin.
  • Less infamous (i.e. non-retired) hurricanes may have a separate page distinguished by year (e.g., Hurricane Bertha (1996)), especially if it must be differentiated (e.g. Tropical Storm Bret (1993) and Hurricane Bret (1999)). The general rule is that if the name is retired, it should have the main article, otherwise it should be distinguished by year.
  • If a name has been used only once (or is being used for the first time) and is not warranting an article, it should be created as a redirect to that season (e.g. Tropical Storm Sebastien redirects to 1995 Atlantic hurricane season).
  • Never hesitate to add a redirect when there is no article for a particular hurricane. Redirects help users to find information if it's "hidden" in a season article, and prevent spurious creation of new articles. This is particularly useful for active hurricanes, as users will otherwise often jump at the chance to write a "new" article about the event. Articles should be redirected to disambiguation pages or (only when there is no ambiguity) to the season article that includes the hurricane. Do not redirect to the season article when a disambiguation page exists, as there is then no way for readers to find the disambiguation.
    • This is also helpful for people who wish to provide links to WP for current storms: they can do it once, and the redirect will catch the in-links unless and until a separate page is created. Question: should the redirect go to the season page, or the section thereon for that specific storm?
  • Unnamed (including numbered) hurricanes (used for older tropical cyclones in the Atlantic and Pacific basins, and for all tropical cyclones in the Indian Ocean basin) should be distinguished by location, type, and year. Three naming conventions are acceptable: Galveston Hurricane of 1900, 1928 Okeechobee Hurricane, or Unnamed Hurricane (1975). All unnamed hurricanes should always have a year in the name. Again, create redirects wherever necessary to avoid confusion or duplicate articles.

Storm article structure

Storm disambiguation pages

  • All tropical cyclones of the same name should be visible through a disambiguation page (e.g., Hurricane Diana (disambiguation)). If none of the disambiguated storms are particularly infamous the main name may be used for the disambiguation (e.g., Hurricane Danielle). The disambiguation should be basin-independent and should cover all storms in all basins with the same name. If in doubt use "Tropical Storm" or "Tropical Cyclone" as the prefix for the disambiguation when multiple basins are involved.
    • Exception: a disambiguation page may not be needed when there are just two storms with a certain name and at one takes the main naming space to disambiguate to the other. See for instance Hurricane Andrew.
  • Disambiguation pages are also categorized by basin (sometimes into multiple basins); see Typhoon Nina for an example. An example basin category is Category:Atlantic hurricanes.
  • Disambiguation pages are categorized by season as well (see Tropical Storm Hazel for an example). See the child categories of Category:Tropical cyclones by season for a complete list of season categories.
  • Storm disambiguation articles (like Hurricane Gordon (disambiguation)) should be in the Category:Tropical cyclone disambiguation category. Using {{hurricane disambig}} in the article will accomplish this automatically.

Season articles

Hierarchy definition

Tropical cyclones are categorized by basin, strength, season, and region. Seasons are categorized by basin and year.

Tasks


Here are some tasks awaiting attention:


Did you know

Articles for deletion

Featured article candidates

Featured list candidates

Good article nominees

Good article reassessments

Peer reviews

Requested moves

Articles to be merged

(7 more...)

Pages needing attention

Wikipedia:Pages needing attention listings are no longer being updated. For by-topic listings of articles that need attention, see:

To flag an article for attention, add a cleanup template to the article or talk page. See Wikipedia:Template index/Cleanup for a listing. All previously listed articles have either been fixed or tagged.

See also the page history of Wikipedia:Votes for rewrite which ran from May 2002-June 2003 then was redirected to here.

Adopt an article

Similar to the Collaboration of the week, but on a smaller scale, you might want to "adopt" an article. This would involve doing the research, writing, and picture-taking (if possible) for either a non-existent article or a stub. Of course, everyone else can still edit an adopted article, and you can work on other things too, but the idea is to find a focus for a while, to try and build up the number of quality articles the Project has produced.

Other subpages

WikiProject
Tropical Cyclones

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Task forces

Western Pacific task force (talk)
Eastern Pacific task force (talk)
Atlantic task force (talk)
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Southern Hemisphere task force (talk)
Graphics task force (talk)
2018 FT task force (talk)
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Project resources (talk)
Jargon (talk)
WikiProject statistics (talk)
Article requests (talk)
Cyclone Cup (talk)
Vital articles (talk)
Showcase (talk)
Style guidelines (talk)
Awards (talk)

Assessment

Main assessment page (talk)
Assessment tables (talk)
Assessment log (talk)
Assessment statistics (talk)

Tropical cyclones portal

Parent project

WikiProject Weather (talk)

Categories

Lists

See also Category:Lists of tropical cyclones. Where possible these should be complemented by or replaced by categories.

Articles

Main Wikipedia articles on Tropical Cyclones


Please feel free to list your new Tropical Cyclones-related articles here (newer articles at the top, please). Any new articles that have an interesting or unusual fact in them should be suggested for the Did you know? box on the Main Wikipedia page. DYK has a 120 hr. time limit from the creation of the article.

For more information on WikiProjects, please see Wikipedia:WikiProjects and Wikipedia:WikiProject best practices.