Look back on May 4th, 2003....historic outbreaks
Posted: Tue May 04, 2004 12:47 pm
One year ago today and tonight, deadly and destructive tornadoes struck the central United States from Kansas and Missouri southeastward into western Tennessee. Numerous supercell storms exploded in the warm sector between the warm front and the dryline. Areas affected by tornadoes include Wyandotte and Leavenworth County in Kansas where at least 1 person was killed. The tornado in the KC area was an F4 at it's peak with winds anywhere from 207-260 mph on the northwest side of Kansas City. In fact it was so dangerous at the KC Airport that officials there evacuated folks from the airport terminals and took them into the underground tunnels, which is where you're supposed to be when there are tornadoes this large and this devastating. Flights were obviously cancelled as this tornado roared by near the airport on the north side of the KC Metro area.
Meanwhile areas further south didn't fare well either as large and destructive tornadoes slammed into towns and communities across southeastern Kansas and southwestern Missouri during the late afternoon and early evening hours on May 4th, 2003. Some of the hardest hit areas included Franklin, KS where nearly half of the town was flattened by a large and destructive tornado. Girard, KS had 3 inch diameter hail, trees and powerlines downs and homes and barns destroyed by a large tornado. This destructive tornado had a path width of nearly 1 mile wide in Aurora, KS. Just think of a tornado being a mile wide causing all that destruction. Just amazing stuff.
As this tornado tracked northeastward into Missouri, it morphed into a huge wedge tornado. Towns affected by this wedge tornado included Lamar, Stockton, and Pierce City, Missouri just to name a few towns. This tornado in southwest Missouri produced F3 damage with winds of 158-206 mph. Most of the fatalities from this May 4th tornado outbreak occurred in southwest Missouri.
Later at night, a huge wedge tornado slammed into Jackson, TN with F4 damage. This tornado was 1/2 mile wide at one point and was occasionally rain wrapped. This twister was on the ground for 26 miles, but was moving towards the ene at over 60 mph. It was on the ground for 23 minutes for 26 miles. That would mean 62-65 mph forward speed with this tornado.
These are just a few of the significant events that occurred back on May 4th, 2003. The following http://www.spc.noaa.gov/climo/reports/030504_rpts.html shows the SPC reports from May 4th. This was one of the worse tornado days of the year with large, damaging, killer tornadoes in a 5 state region from Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Tennessee as well.
Jim
Meanwhile areas further south didn't fare well either as large and destructive tornadoes slammed into towns and communities across southeastern Kansas and southwestern Missouri during the late afternoon and early evening hours on May 4th, 2003. Some of the hardest hit areas included Franklin, KS where nearly half of the town was flattened by a large and destructive tornado. Girard, KS had 3 inch diameter hail, trees and powerlines downs and homes and barns destroyed by a large tornado. This destructive tornado had a path width of nearly 1 mile wide in Aurora, KS. Just think of a tornado being a mile wide causing all that destruction. Just amazing stuff.
As this tornado tracked northeastward into Missouri, it morphed into a huge wedge tornado. Towns affected by this wedge tornado included Lamar, Stockton, and Pierce City, Missouri just to name a few towns. This tornado in southwest Missouri produced F3 damage with winds of 158-206 mph. Most of the fatalities from this May 4th tornado outbreak occurred in southwest Missouri.
Later at night, a huge wedge tornado slammed into Jackson, TN with F4 damage. This tornado was 1/2 mile wide at one point and was occasionally rain wrapped. This twister was on the ground for 26 miles, but was moving towards the ene at over 60 mph. It was on the ground for 23 minutes for 26 miles. That would mean 62-65 mph forward speed with this tornado.
These are just a few of the significant events that occurred back on May 4th, 2003. The following http://www.spc.noaa.gov/climo/reports/030504_rpts.html shows the SPC reports from May 4th. This was one of the worse tornado days of the year with large, damaging, killer tornadoes in a 5 state region from Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Tennessee as well.
Jim