18
   

Stupid meteorology!

 
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Apr, 2011 10:11 pm
@JPB,
Weather channel said a few minutes ago that there is one on the ground in West Virginia. Isn't that where RealJohnBoy lives?
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Apr, 2011 10:12 pm
@JPB,
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/04/28/usa-weather-alabama-toll-idUSN2719822520110428

Quote:


BIRMINGHAM, Ala, April 27 | Wed Apr 27, 2011 11:16pm EDT

(Reuters) - Tornadoes and storms killed 45 people in Alabama on Wednesday, authorities said, bringing the total dead in storms and flooding across the U.S. south to at least 66 people over the last three days.

"State EMA (emergency management agency) office can confirm 45 storm-related deaths today in Alabama," said Yasamie August, spokeswoman for the Alabama Emergency Management Agency, told Reuters. Fifteen people were killed in Tuscaloosa, central western Alabama, she said.
0 Replies
 
JPB
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Apr, 2011 10:13 pm
@JPB,
138 tornado reports

http://www.spc.ncep.noaa.gov/climo/reports/today.gif
0 Replies
 
JPB
 
  2  
Reply Wed 27 Apr, 2011 10:13 pm
@Butrflynet,
He's in Charlottesville, VA.
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Apr, 2011 10:22 pm
@JPB,
Weather Channel now saying tornadoes are on the ground all across northwestern Georgia.

These appear to be the same line of storms and high winds we had here in ABQ yesterday riding the jet stream eastward.
JPB
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Apr, 2011 10:31 pm
BULLETIN - EAS ACTIVATION REQUESTED
TORNADO WARNING
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GREENVILLE-SPARTANBURG SC
1221 AM EDT THU APR 28 2011

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN GREENVILLE-SPARTANBURG HAS ISSUED A

* TORNADO WARNING FOR...
HABERSHAM COUNTY IN NORTHEAST GEORGIA...
THIS INCLUDES THE CITY OF CLARKESVILLE...
SOUTHERN RABUN COUNTY IN NORTHEAST GEORGIA...
NORTHWESTERN STEPHENS COUNTY IN NORTHEAST GEORGIA...
THIS INCLUDES THE CITY OF TOCCOA...
CENTRAL OCONEE COUNTY IN UPSTATE SOUTH CAROLINA...
THIS INCLUDES THE CITY OF WALHALLA...
0 Replies
 
JPB
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Apr, 2011 10:31 pm
@Butrflynet,
Daytime tornadoes would be bad enough. I can't imagine having one rip through at night.
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Apr, 2011 10:33 pm
@JPB,
I hope this isn't a prelude to what the hurricane season is going to be like later this year.

If a hurricane hits the Gulf, that is sure going to stir up all that oil sludge below the surface.
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Apr, 2011 01:15 am
http://abcnews.go.com/US/tornadoes-77-killed-south-including-61-killed-alabama/story?id=13474955

April 28, 2011

Deadly tornadoes, thunderstorms tore through the south Wednesday killing more than 70 people in four states, authorities said.

This is latest round of storms to hit the region over past several days.

At least 77 deaths are being blamed on the severe weather, according to the Associated Press.

The majority of those deaths were reported in Alabama with 61 people killed – including 15 in the city of Tuscaloosa alone.

"They were telling us that it was going to be a pretty significant storm and that it has been. You can see that by the number of fatalities throughout the state," said Alabama Emergency Management Agency information manager Yasamie August.

Mayor Walter Maddox confirmed that 15 people died Wednesday in Tuscaloosa, Ala., a city of approximately 180,000 leveled by an estimated mile-wide tornado.

...

Maddox said at least a dozen city roads remain impassable and 83,000 homes were without power. Several city building including a fire station and a communication plant have been damaged.

The University of Alabama is located in Tuscaloosa. Classes have been canceled for today.

"We have way over 100 injuries throughout the city of Tuscaloosa," Mayor Maddox said Wednesday. "We have hundreds of homes and businesses destroyed and hundreds more damaged."

Maddox said the National Guard were being dispatched to devastated areas across the state the Associated Press reported.

President Obama declared a state of emergency for the search and rescue response in Alabama, and Gov. Robert Bentley told WBMA he expected him to declare another one to help pay for the cleanup.

...

Fatalities in Georgia, Mississippi and Tennessee

Crystal Paulk-Buchanan, a spokeswoman for Georgia emergency management in Atlanta, said at least nine people have been killed so far.

"We have nine confirmed statewide fatalities at this time. There are seven total in Catoosa County where tornadoes hit Ringgold, the town of Ringgold earlier. And two in Dade County," Paulk-Buchanan told ABC News Radio.
Tuscaloosa Tornado Caught on Tape Watch Video
85 Million Americans in Path of Latest Storms Watch Video
Tornado Forms in Alabama Watch Video

Paulk-Buchanan said officials have received more reports of damage in Merriweather, Polk and Pickens Counties.

"We've had several mobile home parks that have been reported to have received significant damage. In Pickens County, there were actually a couple of chicken houses that were destroyed and there are about 100,000 chickens that need to be rounded up," she said.

In addition, at least 11 were dead in Mississippi, ABC News confirmed.

The Associated Press reported at least one person killed in Tennessee Wednesday.

The weather system was expected to move into Georgia, Tennessee and Kentucky overnight and into the Carolinas by Thursday morning.
0 Replies
 
jespah
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Apr, 2011 06:06 am
Gawd.
0 Replies
 
Region Philbis
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Apr, 2011 06:07 am


http://s.imwx.com/img/images/news/april/altornado-042711-2-600x405.jpg

massive Tuscaloosa twister...
sozobe
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Apr, 2011 06:45 am
@Region Philbis,
Bunch of videos here... yoiks.

http://www.buzzfeed.com/mjs538/videos-of-the-tuscaloosa-tornado
0 Replies
 
JPB
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Apr, 2011 07:03 am
South storm death climbs to 193; 128 in Ala.

Thoughts and prayers continuing.
0 Replies
 
JPB
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Apr, 2011 07:12 am
Stole this from elsewhere...

Tuscaloosa News:

Besides fatalities, casualties and destruction of homes and businesses in the tornado's path, the city's infrastructure was badly wounded. Tuscaloosa Emergency Management Agency off 35th Street had severe damage, and the city's Environmental Service Facility was nearly destroyed with garbage and trash trucks damaged as well.

"We've lost our ability to remove debris and garbage," Maddox said.
ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Apr, 2011 07:14 am
@JPB,
The weather office in Birmingham apparently had to be evacuated last night. Our local office is closed. My v.p. had a 6 a.m. meeting about the storms.
0 Replies
 
JPB
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Apr, 2011 07:19 am
@JPB,
Oilville is between Charlottesville and Richmond.

0 Replies
 
JPB
 
  3  
Reply Thu 28 Apr, 2011 07:34 am
mismi posted on her FB wall.

Quote:
WE ARE OKAY! So sorry! We have been without cable, phone and internet since the straight line winds came through the neighborhood yesterday. We have a little damage to the house but nothing major. My heart goes out to SO SO many surrounding us though. Thank you for checking on us!
sozobe
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Apr, 2011 07:36 am
@JPB,
Thanks, I was wondering about her.
0 Replies
 
Tai Chi
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Apr, 2011 07:37 am
@JPB,
Thanks for posting that, JPB. Good to hear.
0 Replies
 
JPB
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Apr, 2011 08:16 am
From Dr Masters blog:

Quote:
A stunning tornado outbreak of incredible violence has left at least 202 dead across the Eastern U.S.; injuries probably number over a thousand, with 600 injured in the town of Tuscaloosa alone. The tornadoes carved huge swaths of damage, completely flattening large sections of many towns, and damage from the storms is likely to be the greatest in history for any tornado outbreak. Hardest hit was Alabama, with at least 149 dead; at least 36 were killed in neighboring Mississippi. NOAA's Storm Prediction Center logged 160 preliminary reports of tornadoes between 8am EDT yesterday and 8am EDT today. At least 11 of these tornadoes were killer tornadoes; deaths occurred in six states. Damage from some of these storms appeared to be at least EF-4, and it is likely that there were multiple violent EF-4 or EF-5 tornadoes. The death toll makes the April 27 - 28 outbreak the third deadliest tornado outbreak of the past 50 years, behind the April 3 - 4, 1974 Super Outbreak (315 killed) and the 1965 Palm Sunday tornado outbreak (256 killed.)


On top of yesterday's tornadoes we're also looking at 100 year flood levels of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers.

Quote:
Unprecedented flooding predicted on Ohio and Mississippi Rivers
This week's storm system, in combination with heavy rains earlier this month, have pushed the Ohio River and Mississippi River to near-record levels near their confluence. The Ohio River at Cairo, Illinois is expected to crest at 60.5 feet on May 1. This would exceed 100-year flood stage, and be the highest flood in history, besting the 59.5' mark of 1937. Heavy rains of 10 - 15 inches have inundated the region over the past few days, and one levee breach at Black River levee near Poplar Bluff, Missouri, has resulted in the evacuation of over 500 homes. Poplar Bluff has received 15.45" of rain since Friday morning. The greatest rain gauge-measured precipitation from the storm occurred in Springdale, Arkansas, where 19.70" inches has fallen since Friday morning.

Record 100+ year flood expected on Mississippi River
Snow melt from this winter's record snow pack across the Upper Mississippi River has formed a pulse of flood waters that is moving downstream on the Mississippi, and is currently located in Iowa. When this floodwater pulse moves south of Cairo, Illinois over the next two weeks, it will join with the record water flow coming out of the Ohio River, and create the highest flood heights ever recorded on the Mississippi, according to the latest forecasts from the National Weather Service. Along a 400-mile stretch of the Mississippi, from Cairo to Natchez, Mississippi the Mississippi is expected to experience the highest flood heights since records began 100 or more years ago, at 5 of the 10 gauges on the river along this stretch. The records are predicted to begin to fall on May 3 at New Madrid, and progress downstream to Natchez by May 20. Areas that are not protected by levees can expect extensive damage from the flooding, and it is possible that the Army Corps of Engineers will have to intentionally dynamite a levee at Birds Point and New Madrid, Missouri to protect the town of Cairo from flooding.

The Mississippi River at New Madrid, MO, about 40 miles downstream of the confluence of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers, is currently at 44', the 3rd highest flood in history. The river is predicted to crest on Tuesday very near the all-time record height of 48 feet. The NWS warns that at this height, "Large amounts of property damage can be expected. Evacuation of many homes and businesses becomes necessary."


Also, I'll join Dr Masters in encouraging folks to consider disaster aid relief to their charity of choice and to consider a donation to Portlight Strategies -- a 501.c.3 non-profit who provides direct $$$ aid to victims of weather related disasters.

Dr. Jeff Masters wrote:
Helping out tornado victims
For those who want to lend a helping hand to those impacted by the widespread destruction this month's severe weather has brought, stop by the portlight.org blog.


I'm not affiliated with Portlight other than as a contributor, but I've seen first-hand the good works they do, especially in rural areas.
0 Replies
 
 

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