Tame tornadoes: Quietest 3 years for twisters on record
The
U.S. experienced fewer tornadoes in the past three years than any
similar span since accurate records began in the 1950s. Yet
meteorologists aren't sure exactly why.
As this year comes to a
close, about 150 fewer damaging tornadoes than average have hit the
U.S., according to data from the Storm Prediction Center (SPC). Explanations for the decrease in twisters the past three years range from unusual cold to unusual heat, or just coincidence.
Despite
the calmer than average years, deaths due to twisters remain near the
average of 60 each year, with 68 killed in 2012, 55 in 2013 and 42 so
far this year, according to the SPC. That pales in comparison with the
553 Americans killed by tornadoes in 2011.
So far this year,
just 348 EF-1 or stronger tornadoes have touched down across the
country, marking the third-lowest number on record. An
average year sees about 500 EF-1 or greater tornadoes. A total of 364
EF-1 or stronger tornadoes touched down in 2012 and 404 in 2013.
EF
refers to the Enhanced Fujita Scale of tornado intensity, which runs
from EF-0 to EF-5. Most twisters that cause damage and deaths are EF-1
or higher, with wind speeds of at least 86 mph.
Harold
Brooks, a meteorologist with the National Severe Storms Laboratory in
Norman, Okla., said there's no consistent reason for the three-year lull
— the calmest stretch since a similar quiet period in the late 1980s —
because weather patterns have varied significantly from year to year.
While
2012 tornado activity was likely suppressed by the warm, dry conditions
in the spring, 2013 was on the cool side for much of the prime storm
season before cranking up briefly in late May, especially in Oklahoma,
SPC meteorologist Greg Carbin said. Then, activity quickly quieted for
the summer of 2013.
"(This year) the area of the country usually
most productive for tornadoes again experienced below-normal
temperatures but not as extreme as 2013," Carbin said. "The last two
years, it seems, have more in common with one another than the extreme
heat of 2012."
In addition to cooler weather, which limits
instability, the past two years also lacked the stronger, large-scale
weather systems that bring together the ingredients necessary for
widespread severe thunderstorm and tornado outbreaks, Carbin said.
So what can we expect next year? No one can predict that.
"There
is no such thing as a long-range severe storm or tornado forecast," the
SPC said. "There are simply too many small-scale variables involved
which we cannot reliably measure or model weeks or months ahead of
time."
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