Tropical Storm Alice
Tropical Storm Alice may refer to:
Atlantic Ocean
- Tropical Storm Alice (1953), a strong tropical storm that caused a few deaths in Cuba
- Hurricane Alice (1954), two storms in a season named Alice
- Hurricane Alice (1973), a Category 1 hurricane which affected Bermuda and eastern Canada
Western Pacific Ocean
- Typhoon Alice (1947) (T4716), a Category 4 typhoon that did not approach land
- Typhoon Alice (1953) (T5318), a long-lived Category 3 typhoon which did not affect land; crossed the International Date Line before dissipating
- Super Typhoon Alice (1958) (T5811), a Category 4 typhoon that affected Japan; responsible for over 40 deaths on Hokkaidō (ja)
- Typhoon Alice (1961) (T6103, 10W), a Category 1 typhoon that formed in the South China Sea before making landfall near Hong Kong, killing four people there
- Typhoon Alice (1964) (T6404, 05W), a short-lived Category 1 typhoon to the east of the Philippines
- Super Typhoon Alice (1966) (T6616, 16W), a Category 4 typhoon that made landfall in eastern China
- Tropical Storm Alice (1969) (T6907, 07W), a tropical storm that affected southern Japan
- Typhoon Alice (1972) (T7213, 13W), a Category 2 typhoon that passed close to Japan's Boso Peninsula
- Typhoon Alice (1975) (T7511, 13W), a Category 1 typhoon that passed over Luzon in the Philippines and the Chinese island of Hainan
- Typhoon Alice (1979) (T7901, 01W), a Category 3 typhoon that caused severe damage in the Marshall Islands
Southwest Indian Ocean
- Cyclone Alice (1960), struck Mauritius Island, causing 42 deaths and leaving more than 70,000 homeless
- Cyclone Alice (1973), a long-lived cyclone that passed through the southern Seychelles
Australian area
- Cyclone Alice (1965), a short-lived cyclone well away from land
- Cyclone Alice (1974), a cyclone that stayed well to the east of the coast of New South Wales and Queensland
- Cyclone Alice (1976), a cyclone that formed in the Timor Sea and moved west, staying away from any islands
- Cyclone Alice (1980), a strong cyclone that formed near Sumatra and moved to the southwest away from land
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