Sprawling Central U.S. Storm Takes at Least 15 Lives
Above: A
spectacular GOES-16 low-level water-vapor satellite image of the
midlatitude storm system spinning across the central U.S. at 5:17
pm CDT Sunday, April 30, 2017. Data from GOES-16 is
non-operational and preliminary, as the satellite is still
undergoing testing. Image credit: College
of DuPage. |
1
May, 2017
A
classic midlatitude spring storm churned its way across the
midsection of the United States over the final weekend of April,
killing at least 15 people in 5 states. The system’s threats were
multifaceted: torrential rain and flooding, deadly lightning,
downburst winds, and at least two strong tornadoes.
In
textbook fashion, the midlatitude storm was occluding on Monday, with
a cold front racing well ahead of the increasingly stacked upper- and
low-level centers of low pressure over the Midwest. That cold front
may still produce one more day of severe weather from the
Appalachians eastward. Early Monday, the NOAA/NWS Storm Prediction
Center placed most of the region from Virginia to New York under an
enhanced risk of severe weather.
This zone was enveloped by a larger slight-risk area that included
the DC-to-NYC corridor as well as many inland cities from Charlotte,
NC, to Burlington, VT (see Figure 1). A line of thunderstorms should
plow across the region on Monday afternoon and evening, packing
strong downburst winds and pulses of heavy rain. Tornadoes aren’t
likely to be numerous, but they are possible within small-scale
vortices along the squall line or in any isolated supercell storms
that develop ahead of the line.
|
Figure
1. NOAA/NWS/SPC
outlook for severe weather on Monday, May 1, 2017, updated
at 8:00 am CDT. |
Ozarks hammered by record-high flood crests
Widespread
three-day rains of 5” – 10” and more pushed creeks and streams
across the central U.S. out of their banks, and in many cases to
unprecedented heights (see this comprehensive
list from
weather.com’s Jon Erdman). The disruption from closed roads and
flooded structures in and near Missouri may end up on par with that
produced by massive flooding not much more than a year ago, in
December 2015.
Houston,
MO (4.5 miles ESE):
11.15”
Rogers, AR: 10.54”
Bunkie, LA: 10.00”
Savoy, OK (3 miles SE): 8.50”
Owensville, IL: 7.95”
Rogers, AR: 10.54”
Bunkie, LA: 10.00”
Savoy, OK (3 miles SE): 8.50”
Owensville, IL: 7.95”
|
Figure
2. 24-hour
precipitation totals through 7 am CDT Sunday, April 30, 2017,
included widespread rainfall amounts of 3” to 8”. Image
credit: NOAA/NWS/AHPS. |
As
was predicted
last week,
the epicenter of heavy rain and flooding stretched from far eastern
Oklahoma across the Ozarks of southern Missouri and northwest
Arkansas. At least seven flood-related deaths have been reported in
the latter two states, according
to weather.com,
including two children missing after a vehicle was swept from a
roadway near Hindsville, AR.
Water
is now pouring eastward across the region toward the Mississippi
Valley, and several
more inches of rain expected
later this week could exacerbate the situation. At
Cape Girardeau, MO,
the Mississippi River is projected to crest on Saturday at its
second-highest level on record, just a few inches shy of the
48.9-foot level set
on January 2, 2016. The
city has ample protection from a 55-foot flood wall, but many road
closures can be expected across the region, reported the Southeast
Missourian.
|
Figure
3. This
weekend’s storm smashed the previous record crest of the Current
River at Doniphan, MO, of 26.80 feet, set on March 1, 1904. The
water level had reached 32.69 feet as of 6:30 AM CDT, with
additional rise expected on Monday. Image credit: NOAA/NWS
Advanced Hydrologic Prediction Service. |
Vicious tornadoes strike in East Texas
At
least four people were killed, two were missing, and dozens were
injured after multiple tornadoes struck
parts of northeast Texas on
Saturday evening. The worst was in Van Zandt County, where two weak
tornadoes around 4:15 pm CDT were followed by two far more damaging
twisters around 5:30 pm. The latter were both given preliminary
damage ratings
of EF3 after storm survey teams made their way through the wreckage
on Sunday. One of those EF3s was a long-track tornado, with a path
length that may have been continuous for 51 miles.
|
Figure
4. Significant
damage occurred in Canton, TX, from a tornado on Saturday, April
29, 2017, as documented by an NWS storm survey team on Sunday,
April 30. Image credit: NOAA/NWS. |
The
long-track tornado was a highly visible “wedge” photographed by
many residents and storm chasers. It caused major damage in Canton,
about 60 miles east of Dallas, and tossed cars off several highways
that crisscross the region, killing at least one motorist. A barnlike
structure was demolished only an hour before it would have been
packed with high-school prom-goers, but the 20 people already in the
building escaped unharmed, according
to the Dallas Morning News.
Ferocious late-season blizzard socks the High Plains
The
central U.S. storm system dumped more
than two feet of
snow on the high country of southern Colorado, which isn’t all that
unusual for late April. The real eye-opener was the extension of
heavy snow, together with screaming winds gusting well above 40 mph,
into western Kansas, the Oklahoma Panhandle, and the far northern
Texas Panhandle. If the winds are blowing in this wide-open region,
it doesn’t take much snow at all to produce blizzard conditions. In
this case, the snowfall was more than ample.
|
Figure
5. Tabbiy
Anne Russell posted this image from her yard in Angelus, KS, to
the NWS Facebook page in Goodland, KS, on Sunday, April 30, 2017.
Image credit: Courtesy Tabbiy Anne Russell. |
Depth
measurements are notoriously unreliable in blizzard conditions,
because drifting is so widespread, but radar and satellite data
support the idea that snowfall was quite substantial across far
western KS. There are preliminary reports that as
much as 20” fell
near Colby, KS, with a corridor of foot-plus totals reported west of
a line from around Garden City to Colby. Dalhart, TX, reported at
least 9”. The NWS office in Dodge City called the widespread heavy
amounts unprecedented for
so late in the spring.
Even
the modest 2.5” officially reported on Sunday at Dodge City itself
marked the first time a spring snowfall has exceeded 1” in Dodge
City on any calendar day after April 15. Records began at Dodge City
in 1893. Interestingly, the temperature never dropped below 32°F
during the entire event at Dodge City, so Sunday’s record low of
20°F was untouched, though the city did set a record-low daily
maximum of 37°F.
|
Figure
6.
The band of heavy snow left across the High Plains by Sunday's
blizzard, extending from the Texas Panhandle to Nebraska, pops out
dramatically on this visible satellite image from Monday morning,
May 1, 2017. Image credit: NCAR/RAL
Real-Time Weather Data. |
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