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(Ohio Tornado ) The Mid-May 2008 tornado outbreak sequence is a series of tornado outbreaks that affected the Southern Plains, the southeastern and Middle Atlantic region of the United States. The storm has produced 147 confirmed tornadoes starting on May 7 and lasting until late on May 15. The outbreak sequence killed 28 people across several states (25 from tornadoes). The event occurred less than a week after a deadly tornado outbreak that principally affected the state of Arkansas and killed 7 people. ==Meteorological synopsis== The event started in Oklahoma on May 7 as an initial low pressure crossed the southern Plains and produced tornadoes across the Oklahoma City area producing scattered damage throughout the Metro Area including in Yukon, Bethany, Warr Acres and north Oklahoma City. KOCO-TV recorded a wind gust while Chief Meteorologist Rick Mitchell was reporting on the storm. Widespread tree, fence, and minor property damage was reported throughout much of the area while there was also a gas leak reported in Bethany. Tree damage was also reported just outside the KFOR and KOCO stations. Similar conditions occurred south and east of Tulsa, Oklahoma, as the line of thunderstorms raced across the state and caused similar damage although a portions of a storage structure was destroyed by the force of the winds. At least five tornadoes were confirmed throughout the state but all were rated either EF0 or EF1. There were no reports of injuries during the event.〔(Tornado Damage Information )〕〔(2 Confirmed Tornadoes Cause Damage In OKC Area - Oklahoma City News Story - KOCO Oklahoma City )〕〔(Storm Prediction Center 20080507's Storm Reports )〕 Two significant tornado outbreaks affected the southeastern United States on May 8. During the morning hours, tornadoes touched down across northeastern Mississippi including one EF3 in the Tupelo, Mississippi area which heavily damaged several buildings near the Tupelo Airport.〔(Suspected tornado damages Miss. mall - Weather - MSNBC.com )〕 Tornadoes also touched down across northwestern Alabama north and west of Birmingham and Huntsville. One particular tornado was caught on tape by a security camera at a business near Leighton in Colbert County which overturned cars at a parking lot. Another tornado crossed very near the ABC 33-40 Sky Cam in Cullman but the tornado was not seen as very strong winds stopped the video data prior to its passage. Structural damage was also reported to homes across the area.〔(National Weather Service Watch Warning Advisory Summary )〕 While weak tornadoes touched down north of Xenia, Ohio, during the early evening hours, the second outbreak of the day produced several strong tornadoes across the western Carolinas and southwestern Virginia. A line of showers and thunderstorms moved across the Appalachians. CAPE values were at around 1500 j/kg across parts of North Carolina.〔(May 8, 2008 Severe Weather Event )〕 One tornado hit the Clemmons, North Carolina area producing EF3 damage to several homes. The same area was hit an F3 tornado on the same date in 1998. Just after 11:00 pm, another tornado from the same supercell struck the western Greensboro region, killing one person inside a truck overturned by the tornado. The storm also damaged several buildings including homes, businesses and warehouses. Two Fed-Fex planes at the Piedmont Triad International Airport were pitched off the tarmac as the storm lifted near the area.〔http://www.myfoxwghp.com/myfox/pages/News/Detail?contentId=6500319&version=53&locale=EN-US&layoutCode=TSTY&pageId=3.1.1〕 Other tornadoes produced some significant damage north of the Piedmont Triad region across southern Virginia.〔〔(Reported twister tears through central North Carolina ) Retrieved May 9th, 2007.〕〔(NCDC: Event Details )〕 On May 10, a new wave of tornadoes from a second system affected portions of the southern Plains and the Lower-Mississippi Valley. Temperatures across the region reached the 80s across portions of the South with mostly upper 70s elsewhere. CAPE values were between 1000 and 2000 j/kg near the center of the low with reading over 2000 j/kg across Mississippi. Helicity levels were over 250.〔(National Weather Service - Little Rock, Arkansas...Severe Weather on May 10, 2008 (Pg1) )〕 A moderate risk of severe storms was issued for a large portions of the Mississippi Valley as well as the Eastern Plains. Severe storms began to occur across northwestern Arkansas, southeastern Kansas and eastern Oklahoma during the late afternoon hours. Tornado watches extended from eastern Oklahoma to South Carolina and north to near Kansas City.〔(Storm Prediction Center Tornado Watch 293 )〕〔(Storm Prediction Center Tornado Watch 294 )〕 One violent EF4 tornado killed 15 people in Missouri and six people in northeastern Oklahoma, with one other death from an EF1 tornado also in Missouri.〔 Moderate to major damage was reported across Ottawa County, Oklahoma, and Newton County, Missouri, as well as in Stuttgart, Arkansas, and near McAlester, Oklahoma, where a tornado was caught on tape by a television crew from a helicopter. Other tornadoes were reported across Missouri, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Kansas. In the late evening, after crossing the Mississippi River, the supercells combined into a bow echo/derecho that tracked from the Memphis Metropolitan Area then across northern Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina, with widespread wind damage and embedded tornadoes. Two people were killed in Laurens County, Georgia, and at least 85,000 customers were left without power in the Atlanta metropolitan area.〔http://www.wmgt.com//index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=711&Itemid=103〕 Additional tornadoes touched down across the southeast and the eastern Ohio Valley from central Ohio to North Carolina but the bulk of the activity took place across central and southern Georgia where nearly 20 tornadoes were confirmed in that state alone. One tornado went through the city of Macon, Georgia, causing extensive damage to some buildings at Macon State College. This forced the closure of the Macon campus for repair.〔http://www.13wmaz.com/news/local_story.aspx?storyid=52248〕 A violent EF4 was also confirmed near Darien in McIntosh County where numerous buildings near Interstate 95 were heavily damaged or destroyed. This was the first violent tornado in Georgia since an F4 hit four counties north of Atlanta on March 27, 1994. The tornado that occurred during the Palm Sunday tornado outbreak of 1994 killed three and injured 20 over a nearly 50-mile path.〔(Tornado Database, Tornado Maps, Tornado Paths )〕 Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue declared a state of emergency for at least six counties across the state.〔(Mother's Day Tornado Outbreak in Georgia - May 11, 2008 )〕 In addition to the tornado fatalities, one person was killed due to straight line winds in Barrow County, Georgia.〔http://www4.ncdc.noaa.gov/cgi-win/wwcgi.dll?wwevent~ShowEvent~710917〕 A third albeit smaller outbreak affected the Deep South on May 14–15. On May 14, several weak tornadoes touched down across western and central Texas causing minor damage. On May 15, severe thunderstorms with damaging winds and tornadoes went through the Gulf South. In Grosse Tete, Louisiana. Winds from a thunderstorm knocked down a tree onto a camper, killing a man inside.〔(Violent storms spawn tornadoes in Chicago area )〕 In Burnet County, an EF0 tornado caused significant tree damage along with minor damage to a mobile home.〔(All Products by Site - NOAA's National Weather Service )〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Mid-May 2008 tornado outbreak sequence」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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