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The name Olga has been used for sixteen tropical cyclones worldwide: three in the Atlantic Ocean (where it replaced the name Opal), ten in the Western Pacific Ocean, and three in the Australian region in Southern Hemisphere. In the Atlantic: * Hurricane Olga (2001) – large Category 1 hurricane that had no effect on land. * Tropical Storm Olga (2007) – off-season storm that killed 40 people, mostly in the Dominican Republic. * Tropical Storm Olga (2019) – formed in the Gulf of Mexico and became post-tropical shortly thereafter. In the Western Pacific: In the Australian region:

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  • The name Olga has been used for sixteen tropical cyclones worldwide: three in the Atlantic Ocean (where it replaced the name Opal), ten in the Western Pacific Ocean, and three in the Australian region in Southern Hemisphere. In the Atlantic: * Hurricane Olga (2001) – large Category 1 hurricane that had no effect on land. * Tropical Storm Olga (2007) – off-season storm that killed 40 people, mostly in the Dominican Republic. * Tropical Storm Olga (2019) – formed in the Gulf of Mexico and became post-tropical shortly thereafter. In the Western Pacific: * Tropical Storm Olga (1948) (T4827) * Typhoon Olga (1954) (T5417) * Typhoon Olga (1958) (T5830) * Typhoon Olga (1961) (T6119, 51W) * Tropical Storm Olga (1964) (22W) – formed and remained in the Gulf of Tonkin. * Tropical Storm Olga (1966) (T6634, 37W) * Typhoon Olga (1970) (T7002, 02W, Deling) – affected Japan. * Typhoon Olga (1972) (T7226, 28W) – struck the Marshall Islands and the Northern Marianas, causing minimal damage. * Typhoon Olga (1976) (T7605, 05W, Didang) – affected the Philippines and Japan. * Typhoon Olga (1999) (T9907, 11W, Ising) – killed 106 people in North and South Korea and caused US$657 million in damages. In the Australian region: * Tropical Cyclone Olga (1981) * Tropical Cyclone Olga (2000) – paralleled the Kimberley and Pilbara coasts * Tropical Cyclone Olga (2010) – crossed the lower Cape York Peninsula and then meandered in the southern Gulf of Carpentaria.This article includes a list of named storms that share the same name (or similar names). If an internal link incorrectly led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended storm article. (en)
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  • The name Olga has been used for sixteen tropical cyclones worldwide: three in the Atlantic Ocean (where it replaced the name Opal), ten in the Western Pacific Ocean, and three in the Australian region in Southern Hemisphere. In the Atlantic: * Hurricane Olga (2001) – large Category 1 hurricane that had no effect on land. * Tropical Storm Olga (2007) – off-season storm that killed 40 people, mostly in the Dominican Republic. * Tropical Storm Olga (2019) – formed in the Gulf of Mexico and became post-tropical shortly thereafter. In the Western Pacific: In the Australian region: (en)
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  • Tropischer Wirbelsturm Olga (de)
  • Cyclone tropical Olga (fr)
  • 열대폭풍 올가 (ko)
  • Tropical Storm Olga (en)
  • Furacão Olga (pt)
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