Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

March 2 - 3 tornado outbreak: 10th largest in recorded history?
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 3:06 PM GMT on March 12, 2012 +43
The deadly early-season tornado outbreak of March 2 - 3 that hit Indiana, Kentucky, and surrounding states, killing 41 people, may have been the 10th largest two-day tornado outbreak since record keeping began in 1950. NOAA's Storm Prediction Center now lists 132 preliminary tornado reports for March 2, and 11 for March 3. It typically takes several months to finish damage surveys and verify all the tornadoes that really occur in a big tornado outbreak. Sixty-one tornadoes have been confirmed so far, according to Wikipedia's tally of the outbreak. The two-day total of 143 tornadoes from March 2 - 3 is probably an over count of about 15%, based on historical levels of over counts. This would give the March 2 - 3 outbreak around 120 tornadoes, making it the tenth largest outbreak since record keeping began in 1950. Assuming this is true, the past two tornado seasons would hold four of the top ten spots for largest tornado outbreaks in recorded history. Below are the top two-day tornado outbreaks since 1950. Several of these two-day totals were taken from outbreaks that lasted three or more days; the highest two-day period of activity was selected for this list, so that the outbreak would not be mentioned multiple times. The numbers from the 2011 outbreaks are still preliminary:

262, Apr 26 - 27, 2011
169, Apr 3 - 4, 1974
160, May 29 - 30, 2004
141, May 24 - 25, 2011
135, Jan 21 - 22, 1999
130, Apr 15 - 16, 2011
125, May 4 - 5, 2003
123, Jun 15 - 16, 1992
121, May 4 - 5, 2007
120ish, Mar 2 - 3, 2012
120, May 3 - 4, 1999


Video 1. Spectacular tornado video taken at a home in West Liberty, Kentucky outfitted with seven automatic security cameras, which captured the fury of the strong EF-3 tornado with 165 mph winds that roared overhead on March 2, 2012. The views from all the cameras are worth watching, but don't watch past 7:00, as the end of the video has three minutes of blankness at the end. According to an article at wkyt.com, the home owners, Randy and Norma Risner, took shelter in the basement, and their home survived the tornado. "You could actually feel the ground shaking and our the 11-foot basement walls were shaking, too," Norma said. The tornado destroyed their workshop (caught on camera), and another camera shows the roof of their neighbors home peel off.


Video 2. Perhaps even more impressive is video taken at a nearby pharmacy showing the West Liberty tornado destroying buildings across the street. The view from Clinic Pharmacy starts at 0:50 into this video.

The uncertain business of counting tornadoes
While there's no question that having four top-ten tornado outbreaks in just two years is highly unusual, the quality of our tornado data base is poor, and there are probably outbreaks that occurred prior to 1990 that were significantly under-counted and would have made the top ten list, had they occurred today. The number of tornadoes being reported has increased in recent decades, and this increase may be due entirely to factors unrelated to climate change:

1) Population growth has resulted in more tornadoes being reported.

2) Advances in weather radar, particularly the deployment of about 100 Doppler radars across the U.S. in the mid-1990s, have resulted in a much higher tornado detection rate.

3) Tornado damage surveys have grown more sophisticated over the years. For example, we now commonly classify multiple tornadoes along a damage path that might have been attributed to just one twister in the past.


Figure 1. Number of EF-1, EF-2, EF-3, EF-4 and EF-5 tornadoes from 1950 to 2011. The total shown for 2011 is preliminary and uses unofficial numbers, but 2011 now ranks in 2nd place behind 1973. There is not a decades-long increasing trend in the numbers of tornadoes stronger than EF-0, implying that climate change, as yet, is not having a noticeable impact on U.S. tornadoes. Data provided by Harold Brooks, NOAA/National Severe Storms Laboratory.

If we look at changes in the strongest tornadoes--EF-1, EF-2, EF3, EF4, and EF-5 twisters, the ones most likely to have a reliable long-term detection rate, due to their destructive power--we see no sign of an increasing trend in recent decades (Figure 1), even if we include 2011. However, it is difficult to make solid conclusions on how tornadoes may be changing, since the quality of the historical tornado data set is so poor. This is largely due to the fact that we never directly measure a tornado's winds--a tornado has to run over a building before we can make an EF-scale strength estimate, based on the damage. As tornado researcher Chuck Doswell said in a 2007 paper, "I see no near-term solution to the problem of detecting detailed spatial and temporal trends in the occurrence of tornadoes by using the observed data in its current form or in any form likely to evolve in the near future." Major changes in the rating process occurred in the mid-1970s (when all tornadoes occurring prior to about 1975 were retrospectively rated),and again in 2001, when scientists began rating tornadoes lower because of engineering concerns and unintended consequences of National Weather Service policy changes. Also, beginning in 2007, NOAA switched from the F-scale to the EF-scale for rating tornado damage, causing additional problems with attempting to assess if tornadoes are changing over time.


Figure 2. Thomas Hudson and the Portlight trailer in Harrisburg, Illinois.

Portlight disaster relief charity responding to the tornado disaster
The Portlight disaster relief charity has made a strong showing in tornado-devastated Harrisburg, Illinois and Henryville, Indiana. Both towns were hit by deadly EF-4 tornadoes during the February 28 - March 3 tornado outbreak. From the Portlight blog:

"Yesterday we went to Henryville, Indiana and volunteered for a few hours, mainly unloading trailers with water, canned goods, etc.

The people were in great spirit, eager to rebuild, and overall thankful that it wasn't worse than it was.

Myself, Jeremiah Moran, Blaize Edwards, and Andrew Newcomb made the 2 hour drive from Washington, Indiana.

We will be trying to get back this weekend or a couple of days next week."

An interesting sciencedaily.com article discusses how the powerful EF-4 tornado from the February 29, 2012 outbreak that devastated Harrisburg, Illinois passed through a high-density network of seismographs. "The seismograms show a strong, low-frequency pulse beginning around 4:45 a.m. on Feb. 29. Our preliminary interpretation, based on other seismic records of tornadoes, suggests that we were recording not the tornado itself, but a large atmospheric pressure transient related to the large thunderstorms that spawned the tornadoes."

I'll have a new post by Wednesday.

Jeff Masters
HARRISBURG IL (catfish10)
HARRISBURG IL
HARISBURG IL. (catfish10)
Golden circle building
HARISBURG IL.
Categories: Tornado
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1001. Patrap 3:39 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
New EVE frame shows the Bloom still brightening.

Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 372 Comments: 111641
1002. Patrap 3:40 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
1432 is the Source

Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 372 Comments: 111641
1003. GeorgiaStormz 3:41 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
Quoting SPLbeater:
*sigh*

It has been too long since i been included in a slight risk area. :/



Spring is over. Now comes summer....
If this keeps up, by june, all the severe weather will be in CAN and it will be 100F up to MI.
Pulse t-storms starting to refire in AL. The little gnats have gone crazy, just wait till we have dew.

Member Since: February 11, 2012 Posts: 0 Comments: 7178
1004. SPLbeater 3:42 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
Quoting TheOnlyBravesFan:


Were the 3 people who plused that before me all women? lol

Also, am I bad for being a man(ok boy) who agrees? That last item is so scary, I don't know how I could survive without it!


i thought u was a girl?

hmm, maybe an 'it'...lol
Member Since: August 4, 2011 Posts: 43 Comments: 3955
1005. Patrap 3:42 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
From solarham.com

1432 Produces Moderate Flare

A moderate M2.8 Solar Flare peaked at 15:21 and was centered NOT around Sunspot 1429, but around Sunspot 1432 located towards the middle of the visible solar disk.
Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 372 Comments: 111641
1006. SPLbeater 3:43 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
Quoting GeorgiaStormz:



Spring is over. Now comes summer....
If this keeps up, by june, all the severe weather will be in CAN and it will be 100F up to MI.
Pulse t-storms starting to refire in AL. The little gnats have gone crazy, just wait till we have dew.



the SPLbeater meteorological service puts Cobb County GA in a high risk tomorrow.
Member Since: August 4, 2011 Posts: 43 Comments: 3955
1007. HurricaneHunterGal 3:47 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
Quoting kwgirl:
I had read somewhere that solar flares could affect the earth by bombarding it with nutrinos that pass through the earth and maybe cause earthquakes. Of course, I read a lot of Sci-fi so it could be something fictional. Does anyone here know if this is a theory? I believe that Xyrus2000 says he works for NASA. Is he an astrophysicist?


I have done a little bit of research myself on this topic and found a few interesting articles.

Look up "Universality in Solar Flare and Earthquake Occurrence" by L. de Arcangelis, C. Godano, E. Lippiello, and M. Nicodemi
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.96.051102

And "Universality in solar flare, magnetic storm and earthquake dynamics using Tsallis statistical mechanics"
Georgios Balasis, Ioannis A. Daglis, Anastasios AnastasiadisConstantinos Papadimitriou, Mioara Mandeac, Konstantinos Eftaxias
doi:10.1016/j.physa.2010.09.029

Also see: Complexity in Sequences of Solar Flares and Earthquakes by VLADIMIR G. KOSSOBOKOV, FABIO LEPRETI, and VINCENZO CARBONE in Pure and Applied Geophysics.
DOI 10.1007/s00024-008-0330-z
Member Since: August 17, 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 246
1008. GeorgiaStormz 3:48 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
Quoting SPLbeater:


the SPLbeater meteorological service puts Cobb County GA in a high risk tomorrow.



If wishes were horses then SPL would fly, way way up in a hurricane's eye.

unfortunately, nothing will happen for at least 8 days.
Member Since: February 11, 2012 Posts: 0 Comments: 7178
1009. TropicTraveler 3:51 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
Reasonable minds may differ on any subject, and often do. The discussions between them often raise new insights and improve the understanding of both. The trick is to have those discussions without offending one another with inflammatory language. Someone who calls me a liberal is saying I'm englighted, and I appreciate that. As to leftist, I take exception. I have always been right handed.

The weather is starting to get very interesting, and thank heavens it pays no attention at all to politics. I especially loved the focus yesterday on the solar weather which affects the tropics along with the rest of the earth. In fact as I looked at the many views of the solar "triangle" I pondered on how very little we know about the sun and wondered if it could do other odd things, after all the universe is little understood. So we should live for today and appreciate the fascinating weather of our planet together, which is why I like this blog very much. It enlightens, educates and is fascinating.
Member Since: July 24, 2007 Posts: 2 Comments: 896
1010. TheOnlyBravesFan 3:52 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
Quoting SPLbeater:


i thought u was a girl?

hmm, maybe an 'it'...lol


Dang. Nope, a guy here, just the pic shows a girl, it was the best picture in Evony :D
Member Since: January 30, 2012 Posts: 10 Comments: 186
1011. HurrikanEB 3:54 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
Could Greek volcano force the nation to default?


A volcano on the island of Santorini in Greece seems a bit restless, according to scientists studying the latest data.

Monitoring stations on the island indicate the Santorini caldera is awake again and rapidly deforming, said Georgia Tech researcher Andrew Newman.

After decades of little activity, a series of earthquakes and deformation began within the Santorini caldera in January of 2011 Mr. Newman said. Since then our instruments on the northern part of the island have moved laterally between five and nine centimeters.


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1012. Patrap 3:54 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 372 Comments: 111641
1013. TheOnlyBravesFan 3:54 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
Quoting SPLbeater:


the SPLbeater meteorological service puts Cobb County GA in a high risk tomorrow.


The Storm Prediction Center of TheOnlyBravesFan has placed western North Carolina under an extremely high risk of severe storms, centered over the home of SPLbeater
Member Since: January 30, 2012 Posts: 10 Comments: 186
1014. TheOnlyBravesFan 3:56 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
Quoting GeorgiaStormz:



If wishes were horses then SPL would fly, way way up in a hurricane's eye.

unfortunately, nothing will happen for at least 8 days.


So mean lol
Member Since: January 30, 2012 Posts: 10 Comments: 186
1015. BobWallace 3:59 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
Quoting kwgirl:
Good Morning! I think all women in America should stop "accomodating" men until the national election. Then not only will the women vote, but the men may change their thinking as well. I am talking the same kind of revolt that women did to get the vote. Stop cooking, cleaning, and definitely NO SEX!


Might I petition for a litmus test? A pass for those of us who support women's rights.

While I'm an old white guy I would prefer to not be thrown out with the bath water....
Member Since: February 22, 2011 Posts: 0 Comments: 1344
1016. BobWallace 4:02 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
Quoting RitaEvac:
The sun has being doing this stuff for eons, nothing new going on, just the fact technology has allowed the casual user to see this stuff in real time. Nothing to see here, move along


I think I'll save this one for the first 'cane of the season.

Nothing to see here, move along.... ;o)
Member Since: February 22, 2011 Posts: 0 Comments: 1344
1017. TropicTraveler 4:05 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
There is a new blog.
Member Since: July 24, 2007 Posts: 2 Comments: 896
1018. KEEPEROFTHEGATE (Mod) 4:32 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
Quoting Patrap:
Lasco Image with Comet inbound to SOL


comet impact will cause a flare event
Member Since: July 15, 2006 Posts: 144 Comments: 40670
1019. FtMyersgal 4:39 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
Quoting Grothar:


What's a grit?


Hi Grothar. Seems everyone was bickering last night and I didn't see anyone post a reply.

I guess My Cousin Vinny
Member Since: September 16, 2010 Posts: 0 Comments: 1004
1020. Floodman 4:49 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
The two yutes...need I say any more?
Member Since: August 2, 2006 Posts: 10 Comments: 9919
1021. Floodman 6:04 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
ECHO...ECHo...Echo...echo...

Now batting for New York, Minnie Minoso...
Member Since: August 2, 2006 Posts: 10 Comments: 9919
1022. Jedkins01 7:54 PM GMT on March 14, 2012    
Quoting Xyrus2000:


What? Are you saying viagra popping, closed minded, misogynistic old white guys aren't the best people to be talking about women's health? Are you saying that these people do not represent America?

Oh surely you jest. I'm sure it's every woman's dream to be to be pregnant, handcuffed to a stove, and making pancakes for a plumber. :P



Yep because women who choose not to use birth control definitely want to be pregnant handcuffed to a stove while serving pancakes to a plumber...


I don't think you have any idea about women's health either...

Member Since: August 21, 2008 Posts: 0 Comments: 5336

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About JeffMasters
Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.

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