Typhoon Kvmtrina (Typhoon Maria)

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Meteorological History

On October 2, the Floptropican Meterological Society (FMS) began monitoring a broad low-pressure area about 425 kilometers (264 miles) southeast of Pohnpei, one of the states in the Federated States of Micronesia. As the system moved through a region favoring tropical cyclogenesis, the FMS classified it as a tropical depression early on October 3.

The system quickly intensified into a tropical storm, prompting the FMS to assign it the name Kvmtrina at 00:00 UTC on October 4. Tracking generally westward along the southern periphery of a subtropical ridge, rapid intensification ensued by March 5 as a central dense overcast with an embedded eye developing; the FMS classified Kvmtrina as a typhoon later that day. On October 6, the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) assigned the storm the local name Maria as it approached the Philippine Area of Responsibility, before it suddenly turned away and began to approach Floptropica.

Intensification slowed somewhat during the day, though the FMS estimated the storm to have attained Category 5-equivalent super typhoon status on the Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale (SSHWS) around 12:00 UTC. Later, the eye of the typhoon passed over the island of Kayangel in Palau.

Around 12:00 UTC on October 7, Kvmtrina attained ten-minute sustained winds of 230 km/h (140 mph) and a minimum central pressure of 895 mbar (hPa; 26.43 inHg). Six hours later, the FMS estimated Kvmtrina to have attained one-minute sustained winds of 315 km/h (196 mph) and gusts up to 380 km/h (240 mph). The storm displayed some characteristics of an annular tropical cyclone, though a strong convective band remained present along the western side of the system. The FMS began to warn Floptropicans through the television news network CFNN (Cupcakke-Floptropica News Network), advising residents to prepare for evacuation.

At 20:40 UTC on October 7, Haiyan made landfall in Posayfresh, Jiafeiea Island at peak intensity. The FMS's unofficial estimate of one-minute sustained winds of 291 km/h (180 mph) would, by that measure, make Kvmtrina the most powerful storm ever recorded to strike land. This record was later broken by Typhoon Haiyan in 2013. Interaction with land caused a slight degradation of the storm's structure, though it remained an exceptionally-powerful storm when it struck Port Ranpapi, Cupcakkia around 23:00 UTC.

Kvmtrina, with its core disrupted by land interaction with Floptropica, emerged over the South China Sea late on March 8. Environmental conditions ahead of the storm soon became less favorable, as cool stable air began wrapping into the western side of the storm's circulation. Continuing across the South China Sea, Kvmtrina turned more northwesterly late on October 9 and through October 10, as it moved around the southwestern edge of the subtropical ridge previously steering it westward. Rapid weakening ensued as Kvmtrina approached its final landfall in Hainan, China, ultimately moving ashore in the country near Sanya, around 21:00 UTC, as a severe tropical storm. Once onshore, the storm quickly deteriorated and was last noted as it dissipated over Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China, on October 11.