
Rainfall from Tip indirectly led to a fire that killed 13 Marines and injured 68 at Combined Arms Training Center, Camp Fuji in the Shizuoka Prefecture of Japan. Air Force aircraft flew 60 weather reconnaissance missions into the typhoon, making Tip one of the most closely observed tropical cyclones. Tip's extratropical remnants continued moving east-northeastward, until they dissipated near the Aleutian Islands on October 24. The typhoon made landfall in southern Japan on October 19, and became an extratropical cyclone shortly thereafter. Tip slowly weakened as it continued west-northwestward and later turned to the northeast, in response to an approaching trough. At its peak intensity, Tip was the largest tropical cyclone on record, with a wind diameter of 2,220 km (1,380 mi). After passing Guam, Tip rapidly intensified and reached peak sustained winds of 305 km/h (190 mph) and a worldwide record-low sea-level pressure of 870 hPa (25.69 inHg) on October 12. Initially, Tropical Storm Roger to the northwest hindered the development and motion of Tip, though after the storm tracked farther north, Tip was able to intensify. The forty-third tropical depression, nineteenth tropical storm, twelfth typhoon, and third super typhoon of the 1979 Pacific typhoon season, Tip developed out of a disturbance within the monsoon trough on October 4 near Pohnpei in Micronesia. Typhoon Tip, known in the Philippines as Typhoon Warling, was the largest and most intense tropical cyclone ever recorded. Typhoon Tip at its record peak intensity on October 12Ĭaroline Islands, Philippines, Korean Peninsula, Japan, Northeast China, Soviet Far East, Alaska
