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posted by Woods on Thursday June 19 2014, @02:49PM   Printer-friendly
from the fascinating-weather-patterns dept.

I heard an item on the radio where the twin twisters that clobbered a Nebraska community were said to be described by meteorologists as rare; the question "Is this due to climate change?" was also posed and left dangling. Investigating further at Google News, I found another item where a storm chaser was saying "I've never seen anything like this".

I then found an article by Andrew Freedman which says there's a wide range of tornado types and that storms which split aren't all that rare.

Pioneering tornado scientist Theodore Fujita, who devised the Fujita Tornado Damage Scale that is still used to classify tornado intensity, identified many types of tornadoes, some of which bore similarities to the twin twisters in Nebraska on Monday.

For example, the Palm Sunday tornado outbreak of 1965, during which nearly 50 tornadoes touched down and 271 people died, there was a well-documented dual tornado that struck close to Toledo, Ohio. A study Fujita published with his colleagues found that this tornado split for only a short time, coalescing back into a larger funnel soon after a famous picture was taken that bears some resemblance to the Pilger tornado.

"A single funnel split into two and then reorganized into one after about a minute," the study says.

Interesting reading.

 
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  • (Score: 1) by strattitarius on Thursday June 19 2014, @04:01PM

    by strattitarius (3191) on Thursday June 19 2014, @04:01PM (#57466) Journal
    Agreed. Why the need to tack on "could this be due to climate change"? No, it's due to weather. It's been happening for, well, ever as far as we are concerned.

    I have no doubt that at some point in the past 1000 years there has been a triple tornado that looked like Medusa. Most likely nobody every saw it.
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