found: Work cat.: Powlesland, R.G. Status of birds and rodents on Niue following cyclone Heta in January 2004, c2006:abstr. (On 6 January 2004, cyclone Heta devastated much of the South Pacific islandnation of Niue) p. 6 (clone Heta, a category 5 hurricane)
found: Floor, A. Cyclone Heta wreaks havoc on Niue Island, via WWW, (cyhttp://www.seafriends.org.nz/indepth/nd010.htm) Mar. 7, 2006(Cyclone Heta reached hurricane strength on New Year's Day 2004 in a deserted part of the Pacific Ocean. After travelling to the Tokelau Islands it retraced its track, heading for Western Samoa where it caused heavy damage. From 4-6 January it headed in a beeline for Niue, passing Niuatoputapu on the way while increasing in strength to the most ferocious storm known to man, a class five hurricane with wind speeds of over 250 km/h. Also accelerating its speed to over 30 km/h, it turned its most devastating flank to Niue, destroying the capital village Alofi and killing a nurse)
found: Tropical Cyclone Heta, via U.S. Dept. of Interior Office of Insular Affairs Web site, Mar. 7, 2006(Territory of American Samoa ... struck by high winds, high surf and heavy rainfall associated with Tropical Cyclone Heta on January 2-6, 2004)
found: Wikipedia, Mar. 7, 2006(Cyclone Heta developed in the South Pacific Ocean and reached cyclone-force winds on Jan. 1, 2004. It struck the island of Niue with a much more direct blow on Jan. 6. It caused extensive property damage throughout the island, and two people were killed. Heta caused American Samoa to declare a state of emergency on Jan. 7, and even though officially the storm never made landfall there, it necessitated the evacuation of 140 people and was responsible for property damage)