Archive for the ‘Local Storm Reports’ Category
Huntsville, AL Snow on Monte Sano
The Alabama Storm Trackers and the LiveStormsNOW.com crew were on the road today in search of snowfall across North Alabama. We found it on Monte Sano as the upper level low swung across. Snowfall was very isolated, but we did encounter some heavier bursts. Around 1” of snow did accumulate before all melting once it ended. Brett Adair, David Ruffini, and Tommy Self were in attendance for the events.
Severe Storms a Little Limited Today…
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Severe Storms have become a common occurence across portions of Alabama over the last week or so with several MCS systems coming through the area every other day or so. Today a slight risk of severe weather was posted for much of the Southeast/Ozarks…but reports were lacking a bit. Some wind damage came in from areas like Lamar/Sumter/Hale counties across the west….as well as the Tennessee Valley counties. Most of the damage was minor being in the form of trees and power lines. Since we are down on the Gulf Coast…..we did note the storm near DeFuniak Springs, Florida overturned some RVs and destoryed some vehicles with trees this afternoon. Lots of wind/lightning in these intense summer time storms.
More MCS activity can be expected as long as the northwest flow maintains. This looks to continue across the region for the next few days. We will have a look at the latest model data and update you on the forecast and expected conditions. Updates later…
Severe Storms….Severe Weather Watch
Most of the active storms this afternoon are over East Mississippi and far west/south Alabama where a Severe Thunderstorm Watch is in effect until later this evening. Several reports of wind and hail have already been received. No major damage, but another day of the pulse severe storms in the south. More storms are forming over portions of eastern Tuscaloosa, central Winston, and northern Cullman counties with some heavy rain and lightning involved. Any storms will have deadly lightning potential yet again this afternoon. Most storms will sag SSE at around 15-20 mph. Some additional development is possible.
Theodore, AL Damage (Mobile County)
Tornado damage about 2 miles from some my in-laws home. This tornado has apparently damaged a fuel station as well as the Food World and tossed many cars about. An 18 wheeler also sustained significant damage at this location. This was the tornadoes starting point as it raked Mobile and Baldwin Counties.
Storms Increasing
Storms are increasing this afternoon on the warm conveyor belt aloft north of the warm front. This is causing some storms to develop with some hail in the strongest updrafts. These storms don’t have the potential to become tornadic due to no low level instability. These cells are all elevated in nature. Heavy rainfall could become a problem by later tonight and a Flash Flood Watch has been placed for much of the area.
we continue to watch the potential for some severe storms on tomorrow as the slight risk has been nudged northward again toward the Montgomery area. Damaging winds and isolated tornadoes look to be the main threats due to the moist environment ahead of the system and high low level shear values. Heavy rainfall could be the biggest threat of everything with this system. We will continue to monitor it.
Crowley/Rayne, LA Tornado
Here is radar of the tornado rated EF-0 near Crowley, LA where some structures were damaged. This tornado was very weak and short lived but did produce about 3 injuries.
This shot is the second and stronger tornado that occurred in Rayne, LA on the NW side of town. Estimates are that 60 homes have been completely destroyed and at least 50 injuries have been observed with some serious. One person has been confirmed dead with unconfirmed reports of more. Gas leaks have been reported and officials have been unable to get into some of the damaged areas due to debris and the threat of gas leaking. Much of Rayne has been evacuated due to these threats. This was one serious beat on radar a little earlier this morning.
Thankfully, we won’t deal with anything like this across Alabama today. Most of the rainfall will be out of here by late tonight and the front will move through North and Central Alabama calmly. A tornado watch is in effect along the AL/FL Gulf Coast until 10PM this evening for the threat of an isolated tornado down that way. Instability is much less than it was in Louisiana earlier….so the threat of major tornadoes has greatly diminished.
NYE 2010 Tornado Outbreak Recap
New Years Eve 2010 will go down as one of the most active weather days on New Year’s Eve ever. As of 1:30AM on 1/2/2011….7 Deaths have been reported from the tornado event. 6 EF-3’s and 4 EF-2’s have been surveyed across the states of Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois, and Mississippi as well….some of which were long track. We will get into the analysis of why the event was so much more devastating than forecast along with some shots of the Jackson, MS tornado from the VIPIR/FasTRAC radar systems from Baron Services.
First….I will start with a few images from the morning of the 31st. The 12z upper air analysis charts revealed a pretty dangerous weather scenario that was about to take shape.
Looking at the above 500mb chart….you can see a very powerful negative tilt shortwave rotating around the upper low across portions of Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas with the apex of the troughing around Tulsa, OK at 7am CST. Also indicated is a very fast mid level flow with 50-80 knots across most of OK/KS out of the southwest. Consistent cooling aloft aided in steepening 500-700mb lapse rates rapidly. The column was also rather dry at H5.
The 250mb chart for the upper atmosphere indicated that massive divergence was beginning to occur across AR/MO in the exit region of a 110+kt upper level jet max plowed into the region. This would again be another factor in aiding updraft development with a “vacuum” effect aloft for the storm to feed off of….or enhancing the lift.
And we can’t leave out the low level flow at 925mb….or about 3000ft. This image indicates a low pressure area just off the surface over portions of NE KS with a major temperature gradient developing. Winds ahead of this low were backed to the S-SSE at the low levels helping create a very favorable shear profile in the lowest 2km of the atmosphere for tornadoes. The 14C temperatures also helped in boosting CAPE values to levels sufficient to keep thunderstorm updrafts pumping….which allowed several of these tornadoes to become large, destructive, and deadly.
Here is a vertical profile from the morning of 12/31 from the Springfield, MO balloon launch…
This sounding profile shows a small inversion or cap around 800mb. However, the inversion is very weak and was broken by forced convection, slight cooling/moistening aloft that brought the profile more toward the wet bulb. Once the storms got into the area….the shear was more than adequate for significant tornadoes given the 550+ m2/s2 shear values in the 0-1km and 0-3km layers. You will notice that the CAPE is only 423j/kg on this sounding…..but that slight moistening of the column boosted those CAPE values shortly after this sounding. I’m sure the 75j/kg 3km or low level CAPE was more like 200 j/kg once the cap eroded. Still, small difference can cause big changes. The main tornadic activity took place just to the east and north of this sounding location where the atmosphere was a little more moist.

Thus, given the conditions stated above….these supercells developed in Eastern Oklahoma and traversed through NW Arkansas into Missouri. This radar capture if of the tornado that hit the Cincinnati, Arkansas community killing 3 as it ripped through town. This tornado was given a preliminary rating of EF-3. These same storms continued and cycled through portions of Missouri producing the killer tornadoes in the Springfield county warning area.
This is an image captured as the supercell produced a tornado at Fort Leonard Wood in Missouri. You can see the vortex on the ground doing pretty much total devastation. Also noted is the horizontal low level vortex just off the ground. This tells me just how dynamical the system was for this area. Very impressive….especially for December.
Later in the afternoon we were keying in on the deep south as a dryer than forecast mid levels were across the region along with a more loaded-gun type sounding. The inversion was quite a bit deeper across the south with isolated showers and convection taking shape and being beaten down by the cap. However, by about 4-5pm it was game time for the Jackson, MS metro area. Supercells were developing south and west of town and were developing rapid rotation quickly as the low level jet was beginning to intensify over the region.
The image above in FasTRAC (Baron Services Product) you can see several rotations embedded within the QLCS (quasi-liner convective system) to the west, but one thing sticks out like a sore thumb. The isolated cell ahead of the line that has a hook structure. This notch southwest of Crystal Springs was feeding off of an environment that was pretty clear to it’s southeast with the low level, moist flow coming from that direction. As the storm moved northeastward we watched it gain strength with higher output of lightning and better low level wind values. As it approached Jackson we began noticing maxing wind velocities.
Reports were coming in that the tornado had touched down just west of I-55 with damage being reported just west of Terry, MS. The tornado then tracked northeast where it continued it’s path toward the Jackson metro.
The tornado is wrapped up with the higher dbZ values (some purples) wrapping in just before reaching I-55. This is an indication that either debris is being thrown by the tornado or either it’s becoming rain wrapped. Given the deep moisture field and radar presentation, I’m pretty sure it was a bit of both.
This image illustrates the strong inflow to the tornado. The reds embedded within that green area indicates range folding as the winds were extremely strong and the radar didn’t properly alias the data correctly resulting in no or bad data. I’m sure those were 80+ mph winds streaming into the tornado just off the surface.
This shot shows the tornado approaching the I-020 vicinity between Jackson and Brandon with many storm chasers all around the cell. At this point, debris was being reported on I-55 with a 1/2 mile wide damage path and the National Weather Service personnel in Brandon were taking shelter as the tornado crossed just to there west. This tornado was mighty impressive with EF-2 strength winds and a 26 mile long path. The downtown area of Jackson dodged a major bullet given that this was during a rush hour period that most folks were off for the holiday. No one has been reported to be killed from this tornado. This tornado also ran across the runway at the Jackson International Airport. This was the beginning of the Mississippi tornadic evening.
Since the NWS office took a hit during the hour they normally launch there weather balloon sounding….the 00z balloon was never released. Jackson did a planned sounding at 04z to see what the atmosphere looked like in the wake of their first tornadic storm.
The sounding revealed an uncapped environment along with nearly 1700 j/kg surface CAPE still in place. One of the reasons that you check the sounding data when it becomes available is the models are not always correct. At this same time….the SPC mesoanalysis page (RUC derived) indicated less than 500j/kg CAPE in this area with building convective inhibition (CINH). One would think that the weather would have calmed down if that were the case…..wrong.
As a second upper level perturbation and jet max moved into the region….a surface low developed on the LA/MS border and moved northeastward along the surface frontal axis. More tornadoes in turn developed across Central/East Mississippi during the overnight in Attalla, Holmes, Kemper, Noxubee counties. More areas are being investigated for ratings as wind or tornado damage.
We will update with more content as needed or if more comes available.
AR/MS/LA/W AL Could get Dangerous…
I don’t like to hear of fatalities when I get up in the morning…..and we already have three in the small community of Cincinnati in Washington County, AR from and early morning tornado that has destroyed at least one brick home and several structures. Tornado watches and warnings continue to be in effect for portions of Northern Arkansas and Southern Missouri at this hour.
These storms intensified rapidly as they pushed across the OK/AR state line this morning into the warm, juicy flow of air coming northward out of the Gulf of Mexico. There is more potential for such an event to unfold further east today.
The 12z sounding from Jackson, MS indicates a loaded gun type setup with quite the inversion around the 775mb level of the atmosphere. This dry air aloft will likely aid in developing potential instability that could be unleashed if this cap breaks. Given the incredible shear values…. it is likely that storms/showers will spin from the near the onset ahead of a massive mid level trough that will shoot northeast later in the period.
Our in-house mesoscale WRF model indicates that the capping should be broken shortly after noon with convection firing across most of Mississippi and potentially into west Alabama. Shear values will be supportive of super cell structures with the potential for tornadoes. This is a developing situation and one that we will possible deploy on for a chase within the next hour or so. Stay tuned for more updates regarding this potential.
Tornadoes in MS/LA….Severe WX On The Way
Storms are really going now and tornado watches are up to the Alabama state line from US-82 southward in Mississippi. Several warnings just came out for the Jackson, MS warning area and these storms are increasing and intensifying. This is expected to continue eastward late into the night and tomorrow across portions of our area. One confirmed tornado in Central Louisiana has destroyed well built brick homes near the Atlanta community. This is a serious situation.
We will be deploying as things get rocky in our vicinity later tonight or tomorrow morning. You can monitor our live streaming video at the top of the page or on WBRC-TV FOX 6 once severe weather coverage picks up. I’ll be with meteorologist James-Paul Dice and Wes Wyatt once continuous coverage begins. More later…
Midwest Severe Storms
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This evening a massive bow echo has tore through portions of Iowa, Illinois and is now moving across portions of Michigan and Indiana. 90 mph winds were just reported near La Porte, IN with this convective system and numerous reports of wind damage are coming in. Trees and power lines have been reported down across the Chicagoland area along with some reports of structural damage. No real reports of injuries have occurred as of now, but there is a moderate risk in place from the Storm Prediction Center and an associated risk of more supercells with damaging winds, large hail and tornadoes further west. Speaking of that…
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Tornado warnings are now being issued south of the Des Moines metro area this afternoon for rotating thunderstorms that have and are continuing to develop along an outflow boundary in Central and Southern Iowa. These storms will have the potential to spawn tornadoes throughout the evening hours and into the overnight given the very unstable boundary layer in place. Some of these tornadoes could be strong, but they shouldn’t be quite as strong as yesterday. As we all know, however, any tornado poses a threat to life and property. Stay tuned to later updates….
