SYDNEY - A tropical cyclone with winds of up to 200 kph crossed Australia's remote northeast coast on yesterday, the second cyclone to hit northern Queensland in a month.
There were no early reports of damage in the area, where there are few major settlements or infrastructure.
Residents had been warned to take shelter as Tropical Cyclone Monica, a mid-range category-three storm, closed in on Lockhart River, an Aboriginal community of about 600 people in Queensland state's sparsely populated Cape York Peninsula.
The cyclone began crossing the coast just south of Lockhart River, about 2,000 km north of the Queensland capital Brisbane, soon after 2pm local time, meteorologists said.
"It will take a couple of hours to cross the coast. It should weaken slightly as it moves across Cape York Peninsula," Queensland Weather Bureau meteorologist Manfred Greitschus told Sky television.
"It still could produce destructive winds for crops or vegetation and weaker shelters."
Cyclone Monica was much weaker than maximum category-five Cyclone Larry, which caused at least A$250 million in damage when it hit near Innisfail, well south of Lockhart River, last month, smashing houses and destroying banana crops.
- REUTERS
Second cyclone hits Queensland coast
AdvertisementAdvertise with NZME.