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Ben Fogle Doesn’t Understand What Causes Tornadoes

February 20, 2012
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By Paul Homewood

 

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Ben Fogle, the Eco-Adventurer, has been visiting Joplin, Missouri to see the devastation caused by last year’s F5 tornado. Writing in last week’s Sunday Telegraph, he says :-

Local storm experts have predicted that the high temperatures out in the Gulf of Mexico are a grim prelude to another bumper season of tornadoes.

We have already seen that, despite last year’s rash of storms, the trend in recent decades has been to less tornadoes in the USA, as the chart below shows. (See report here). This has happened despite warmer waters in the Gulf.

 

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So what does cause tornadoes? NOAA themselves admit nobody really knows :-

The classic answer–"warm moist Gulf air meets cold Canadian air and dry air from the Rockies"–is a gross oversimplification. Many thunderstorms form under those conditions (near warm fronts, cold fronts and drylines respectively), which never even come close to producing tornadoes. Even when the large-scale environment is extremely favorable for tornadic thunderstorms, as in an SPC "High Risk" outlook, not every thunderstorm spawns a tornado. The truth is that we don’t fully understand.

Nevertheless the three conditions mentioned are all integral factors. A look at the temperature map last May, when Joplin was hit, shows the preponderance of cold air to the west and north of Missouri.

 

                      May 2011 Temperature

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This GISS map also shows the temperature contrasts at that time.

 

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Now contrast with this map of Spring temperatures for 2000-10, when tornado occurrences were at a minimum.

 

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Gulf temperatures were as warm as they were in 2011, but it is quite noticeable that, last year, colder air penetrated much further south and east.

There were 79 F3+ tornadoes last year. Disastrous as this was, it was much worse in 1973, when, again, there was a mass of cold air to the west, as can be seen below.

 

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Please, Ben, don’t make simplistic comments about events you don’t understand, particularly ones that can have such tragic consequences.

 

Footnote

I just saw Ben last night swimming with crocodiles in his new TV series. I wish I had a tenth of your courage. Well done, mate!

6 Comments
  1. Otter permalink
    February 20, 2012 3:23 pm

    I think ben should try swimming with pirhana next…

  2. February 21, 2012 12:20 am

    He’s a nice chap, Ben is, but he’s clueless. Nice but dim. One of his heroes is Robert Falcon Scott, who died because he thought ponies would be better than dogs and skis in a rather cold place….

  3. February 21, 2012 1:49 am

    You are incorrect. There is an increasing trend in the number of tornadoes in the US. You have only chosen to display EF3-EF5.

    Click to access tor30yrs.pdf

    • February 21, 2012 11:02 am

      There has been an increase in “reported” tornadoes.

      However, McCarthy and Schaefer made clear in 2002 that “There was a significant increase in tornado occurrence during two periods in the last 33 years – in the early 1980s when National Weather Service (NWS) warning verification began, and in 1990 when the WSR-88D became operational.

      The increase in reported tornado frequency during the early 1990s corresponds to the operational implementation of Doppler weather radars. “

      Doppler picks up many F0 tornadoes that were not spotted before. Excluding F0, F1+ tornadoes have declined since the 1970’s.

      See here.

      US Tornado Trends–Updated to 2011

      • February 21, 2012 11:39 am

        “There has been an increase in “reported” tornadoes.”

        Sorry to be pedantic but then you are incorrect to say “the trend in recent decades has been to less tornadoes” without some qualification.

      • February 21, 2012 12:20 pm

        Thank you, Laz!!

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