Destructive winds have started to lash the Northern Territory coastline as Severe Tropical Cyclone Megan edges closer to making landfall.
At 9:30am this morning (March 18, 2024), Severe Tropical Cyclone Megan was a category three system located 55 km east northeast of Port McArthur.
While Megan is not expected to make landfall until Monday afternoon, it was already close enough to the coast to cause severe weather on Monday morning.
A wind gust of 126 km/h was observed at Centre Island shortly before 9am today. Less than one hour later, a gust of 132 km/h was recorded at 9:43am.
Centre Island is part of the Sir Edwards Pellew Group of Islands, which sit just off the NT coast in the southwest Gulf of Carpentaria. These islands are expected feel the full force of Megan as the system approaches the NT coast on Monday.
According to the official forecast track map from the Bureau of Meteorology, severe Tropical Cyclone Megan is expected to make landfall between Bing Bong and the NT/Qld Border during Monday afternoon into the evening.
Megan's landfall is likely to cause very destructive winds, heavy rainfall, flooding and a dangerous storm tide over the Sir Edwards Pellew Group and along the southwest coast of the Gulf of Carpentaria.
This may include wind gusts to around 200 km/h near Megan's very destructive core, and more than 500 mm of rain near and to the east of the system's centre.
Megan should weaken quickly after crossing the coast. However, the remnant low pressure system is expected to carry heavy rain across the Northern Territory during the next few days.
Megan will be the fourth tropical cyclone to make landfall in the Australian region so far this season and the second to cross the NT coast.
This story first appeared on weatherzone.com.au.