Cyclone Jal

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cyclone_Jal an entity of type: Thing

Severe Cyclonic Storm Jal was the fifth named cyclonic storm and the fourth Severe Cyclonic Storm of the 2010 North Indian Ocean cyclone season. Jal developed from a low-pressure area in the South China Sea that organized into a Tropical Depression on October 28. Jal is a Sanskrit word, meaning water. At least 54 people are known to have been killed in India. As a tropical depression, Jal produced torrential rains over parts of Thailand and Malaysia, triggering severe flooding which killed 59 and four people in the two countries respectively. In Sri Lanka, heavy rainfall with strong winds have caused flooding affecting around 80,000 people. In Thailand, Jal was responsible for 78 deaths, being the 4th deadliest tropical cyclone in the country. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Cyclone Jal
rdf:langString Severe Cyclonic Storm Jal
xsd:integer 29485625
xsd:integer 1113960557
xsd:integer 55
xsd:integer 60
rdf:langString Borneo, Brunei, Malaysia, Malay Peninsula, Andaman Islands, Sri Lanka, India
rdf:langString NIO
xsd:date 2010-11-12
xsd:integer 2010
xsd:integer 1729
xsd:date 2010-03-01
rdf:langString At least 118 dead, 12 missing
xsd:date 2010-11-01
rdf:langString Severe Cyclonic Storm Jal 2010-11-07 0530Z.jpg
rdf:langString Severe Cyclonic Storm Jal near Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India, at peak intensity on November 7
xsd:integer 988
rdf:langString Tropical storm
xsd:integer 2010
rdf:langString Severe Cyclonic Storm Jal was the fifth named cyclonic storm and the fourth Severe Cyclonic Storm of the 2010 North Indian Ocean cyclone season. Jal developed from a low-pressure area in the South China Sea that organized into a Tropical Depression on October 28. Jal is a Sanskrit word, meaning water. At least 54 people are known to have been killed in India. As a tropical depression, Jal produced torrential rains over parts of Thailand and Malaysia, triggering severe flooding which killed 59 and four people in the two countries respectively. In Sri Lanka, heavy rainfall with strong winds have caused flooding affecting around 80,000 people. In Thailand, Jal was responsible for 78 deaths, being the 4th deadliest tropical cyclone in the country.
xsd:gMonthDay --11-08
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 38296

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