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March 1990 Central United States tornado outbreak

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March 1990 Central United States tornado outbreak
Map of confirmed tornadoes in the outbreak
Meteorological history
DurationMarch 11–13, 1990
Tornado outbreak
Tornadoes64 (confirmed)
Maximum ratingF5 tornado
Highest winds300 mph (480 km/h) to 350 mph (560 km/h)
Overall effects
Fatalities2 fatalities
≥89 injuries
Damage$543.4 million (1990 USD)
$1.3 billion (2024 USD)
Areas affectedMidwestern United States, United States Great Plains

Part of the tornado outbreaks of 1990

The March 1990 Central United States tornado outbreak affected portions of the United States Great Plains and Midwest regions from Iowa to Texas from March 11 to March 13, 1990. The outbreak produced at least 64 tornadoes across the region, including four violent tornadoes; two tornadoes, which touched down north and west of Wichita, Kansas, were both rated F5, including the tornado that struck Hesston. In Nebraska, several strong tornadoes touched down across the southern and central portion of the state, including an F4 tornado (possibly a family of tornadoes) that traveled for 131 miles (211 km) making it the longest tracked tornado in the outbreak. Two people were killed in the outbreak, one each by the two F5 tornadoes in Kansas.

Overview

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On March 12, upper-air maps indicated a high-pressure area situated over the Southeastern United States and a closed low-pressure area and accompanied trough entrenched across western portions of the country. Southwesterly flow across the Rocky Mountains proved favorable for low-level lee cyclogenesis, and surface analyses late on March 12 depicted the formation of a 1,004 millibars (29.65 inHg) low-pressure area over eastern Colorado. In the lower levels of the atmosphere, a low-level jet stretching from southern Texas into Iowa invigorated the northward transport of moisture from the Gulf of Mexico. The moisture became entrenched in the warm sector of the low-pressure area, to the east of a well-defined dryline extending from western Kansas into western Texas.[1] Overnight on March 12 into the morning hours of March 13, widespread convection developed across Oklahoma and progressed northeastward into Kansas and Iowa, to the south of a quasi-stationary weather front, leaving a distinct outflow boundary across central and eastern Kansas.[2] Early on March 13, morning atmospheric soundings across the Great Plains indicated an increasingly volatile atmosphere, with warming surface temperatures, strengthening low-level wind fields, and veering winds aloft. A modified atmospheric profile near Hesston, Kansas, indicated convective available potential energy around 3,200 J/kg already in place at 12:00 UTC.[2] In general, weather researchers remarked that the overarching pattern on March 13, 1990, was a synoptically evident pattern reminiscent of past tornado outbreaks.[2] The National Severe Storms Forecast Center – known in modern times as the Storm Prediction Center – responded to this pattern by issuing a broad Moderate risk for severe weather across a wide swath of the Great Plains.[3]

As the trough continued its approach from the west, upper-air plots showed enhanced diffluence focused across much of the region. Into the afternoon hours, the surface low deepened to 996 millibars (29.41 inHg) as it progressed into western Kansas and the Oklahoma panhandle. The increasing atmospheric pressure gradient associated with this feature continued to enhance convergence along the dryline, while the influence of warm daytime temperatures exceeding 70 °F (21 °C) pushed the dryline eastward into western Oklahoma. Continued southwesterly flow around the mid-level low over Utah, Wyoming, and Colorado advected cold mid-level temperatures northeastward toward Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas. Steep mid-level lapse rates further contributed to destabilization of the atmosphere, while moisture content and vertical wind profiles continued to improve. Low-level winds out of the southeast by the evening of March 13 further contributed to convergence along the dryline, which would become the focal point for several tornadic supercells over the ensuing hours as mid-level winds near 100 knots (120 mph; 190 km/h) intersected the region.[1][4] Additional supercells developed along the outflow boundary in Kansas, notably the Hesston tornado family.[2] Alongside the tornado outbreak in the warm sector of the low-pressure area, seasonally cold air on the backside of the low contributed to severe wintry weather, with snowfall up to 8 inches (200 mm) and blizzard-like conditions reported across the Nebraska panhandle.[5]

Confirmed tornadoes

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Confirmed tornadoes by Fujita rating
FU F0 F1 F2 F3 F4 F5 Total
0 12 25 13 10 2 2 64

(based on NOAA Storm Data)

March 11 event

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F# Location County Time (UTC) Path length Damage
Kansas
F0 N of Plevna Reno 2300 0.1 miles (160 m)
F1 Alder to S of Geneseo Rice 2315 14 miles (23 km)
Sources: NOAA Storm Data Tornado History Project - Storm Data, March 11, 1990

March 12 event

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F# Location County Time (UTC) Path length Damage
Iowa
F0 NW of Sawyer Lee 0440 0.2 miles (0.32 km)
Kansas
F1 SE of Topeka Shawnee, Douglas 0549 5 miles (8.0 km) Rated F2 by Grazulis.
F1 W of McClouth Jefferson 0610 3 miles (4.8 km)
Sources: NOAA Storm Data Tornado History Project - Storm Data - March 12, 1990

March 13 event

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F# Location County Time (UTC) Path length Damage
Kansas
F1 NW of Jetmore Hodgeman 0836 1 mile (1.6 km)
F5 Castleton to Hesston Reno, Harvey, McPherson 2234 48 miles (77 km) 1 death - See section on this tornado
F1 E of Thornburg Smith 2248 13 miles (21 km)
F1 NE of Esbon Jewell 2300 1.5 miles (2.4 km)
F5 Goessel to NE of Hillsboro Harvey, McPherson, Marion 2330 22.0 miles (35.4 km) 1 death - See section on this tornado
F0 SW of Portland Sumner 0004 0.1 miles (160 m)
F0 N of Conway Springs Sumner 0012 0.1 miles (160 m)
F2 W of Pilsen to NW of Volland Marion, Morris, Geary, Wabaunsee 0015 55 miles (89 km) See section on this tornado
F1 SW of Webber Jewell 0020 5 miles (8.0 km)
F1 S of Danville Harper 0035 12 miles (19 km)
F1 E of Randall Jewell, Cloud, Republic 0045 13 miles (21 km)
F3 W of Moundridge Reno, Harvey, McPherson 0055 18 miles (29 km) A farm and three homes were destroyed. Caused $275,000 in damage.
F2 W of Belleville Republic 0100 15 miles (24 km) Several farmhouses sustained extensive damage.
F0 S of Belleville Republic 0116 0.5 miles (0.80 km)
F0 Salina Saline 0150 0.2 miles (320 m)
F1 E of Wamego Pottawatomie 0203 2 miles (3.2 km)
F0 S of Concordia Cloud 0240 0.2 miles (320 m)
F1 S of Chetopa Labette 0645 2 miles (3.2 km)
Iowa
F1 N of Stiles to SE of Floris Davis 2132 14 miles (23 km)
F0 Bettendorf area Scott 2231 0.3 miles (480 m)
F0 E of LeClaire Scott 2242 0.2 miles (320 m)
F3 E of LeClaire to SE of Albany, IL Scott, Rock Island (IL), Whiteside (IL) 2245 15.5 miles (24.9 km) Multiple-vortex tornado caused major damage in the Cordova and Port Byron areas. 12 homes were heavily damaged or destroyed, and 26 others sustained lesser damage. One man broke his leg when he was blown off of a scaffold at Cordova Nuclear Plant.
F4 Prairieburg to Worthington Linn, Jones, Delaware, Dubuque 2253 19 miles (31 km) In Worthington, 39 homes and businesses were damaged or destroyed. 13 farms were destroyed as well. Tornado was a half-mile wide at times.
F1 NE of LeClaire Scott, Clinton 2242 13 miles (21 km)
F1 Monticello area Jones 2308 6 miles (9.7 km)
F1 NE of Crescent Pottawattamie 2242 8 miles (13 km)
F1 S of Holy Cross Dubuque 2355 3 miles (4.8 km)
F0 NE of Ortonville Dallas 0120 0.1 miles (160 m)
F2 Ogden to E of Stanhope Boone, Hamilton 0125 22 miles (35 km) Tornado killed livestock and destroyed several outbuildings. Caused $616,000 in damage.
F1 E of Ridgeport Boone 0135 1 mile (1.6 km)
F2 Ankeny to S of Maxwell Polk, Story 0155 15 miles (24 km) Rain-wrapped tornado severely damaged 20 homes in Ankeny, with 16 others sustaining lesser damage. A condominium lost part of its roof, which was thrown onto I-35, resulting in a major car accident. At least a dozen other cars were blown off of the interstate by the tornado. Caused $2,000,000 in damage and injured 15 people.
F3 E of Fernald Story 0236 9 miles (14 km) A tractor-trailer was lifted and thrown into a ditch, injuring the driver. Multiple buildings were damaged or destroyed at a farm as well. Rated F2 by Grazulis.
Oklahoma
F2 NW of Bradley to E of Norman Grady, McClain, Cleveland 2244 28 miles (45 km) Two mobile homes were destroyed and frame homes were damaged near the beginning of the path. The tornado crossed into McClain County and destroyed eight additional mobile homes before clipping the north side of Washington, destroying a trailer and the second story of a house. The tornado then struck Noble before dissipating. In Noble, multiple homes sustained roof and structural damage, and an apartment building lost part of its roof. Tractor-trailers and a mobile home were overturned. The high school lost its press box, scoreboard, and several light poles. One person was injured.
F3 SE of Hawley to NE of Wakita Grant 2315 19 miles (31 km) One house sustained major damage and another lost its roof.
F2 W of Criner to W of Slaughterville McClain, Cleveland 2331 18 miles (29 km) Trailers and outbuildings were damaged and many trees were uprooted. Rated F1 by Grazulis.
F1 NE of Norman Cleveland 2353 5 miles (8.0 km)
F3 NE of Wakita to SW of Mayfield, KS Grant, Sumner (KS) 2354 22 miles (35 km) Caused tree damage in Oklahoma before crossing into Kansas, where five homes were damaged.
F2 SW of Stella to SE of Jacktown Cleveland, Pottawatomie, Lincoln 2359 19 miles (31 km) At the beginning of the path, a mobile home was destroyed in Stella, resulting in a serious injury. A barn was destroyed, a house was unroofed, and three trailers were damaged elsewhere along the path. A mobile home was destroyed near Meeker before the tornado dissipated.
F1 W of Waurika to SW of Loco Jefferson, Stephens 0001 21 miles (34 km)
F3 SW of Loco to NW of Alpers Jefferson, Stephens, Carter, Garvin 0058 22 miles (35 km) Tornado caused major damage in and around Ratliff City. Five mobile homes were destroyed and a motor home was rolled 100 feet. A five-ton crane was blown over, several vehicles were damaged, and debris was found up to a mile away. Caused $750,000 in damage and injured one person.
F2 NE of Tatums to NE of Paul's Valley Garvin 0150 28 miles (45 km) In Pauls Valley, a farm implement company had its roof torn off, and a civic club building lost part of its roof. Barns were destroyed outside of town as well.
F2 NE of Edna Creek, Okmulgee 0210 9 miles (14 km) Several barns were destroyed and 14 power poles were snapped. Caused $75,000 in damage.
Nebraska
F1 NW of Shelton Buffalo 2245 1 mile (1.6 km)
F3 NW of Minden to S of Cairo Kearney, Buffalo, Hall 2300 32 miles (51 km) Numerous outbuildings were destroyed, trees were uprooted, and a county bridge was destroyed. Five farmsteads were heavily damaged as well.
F4 S of Red Cloud to E of Schuyler Webster, Nuckolls, Clay, Fillmore, York, Seward, Butler, Colfax 2305 131 miles (211 km) This was either an extremely long-tracked tornado or a tornado family. Near Red Cloud, a farmhouse was completely "wiped out". The tornado moved into Nuckolls County and struck Lawrence, where 8 homes were destroyed and 45 others were damaged. Crossing into Clay County, the tornado struck Sutton, where one business was destroyed and 11 others were damaged. 49 homes in Sutton were damaged, and a truck and a police car were flipped. 20 farms were damaged in rural areas nearby. The tornado downed trees and power lines in Fillmore County before crossing into York County. A farmhouse was destroyed near McCool Junction. South of York, the tornado destroyed another farmhouse, heavily damaged a gas station and convenience store, tore the roof off of a motel, and destroyed two trucks. A dozen farms were damaged in York County, and about 10,000 geese were killed. 57 railroad cars were derailed near Waco before the tornado crossed into Seward County, where trees and power lines were damaged. The tornado then crossed into Butler County and passed near David City, impacting numerous farmsteads. 35 homes and 155 other structures were damaged or destroyed near David City, and about 1,200 livestock were killed or injured. The tornado then moved into Colfax County, damaging four farms near Schuyler before dissipating. A total of nine people were injured.
F2 E of Sacramento Kearney 2320 8 miles (13 km) Several farms sustained extensive damage with livestock killed, and outbuildings and irrigation pivots destroyed.
F2 S of Wood River Adams, Hall 2325 9 miles (14 km) Two farms were hit, with a farmhouse sustaining extensive damage at one of them. Outbuildings, grain bins, and two barns were destroyed.
F0 N of Kearney Buffalo 2335 0.1 miles (160 m)
F3 N of Alda to NW of Archer Hall, Howard, Merrick 2344 27 miles (43 km) Five mobile homes were destroyed, and other homes sustained minor damage. 15 train cars were derailed near an Army Ordnance Plant, and 47 others were derailed near Grand Island. Several farms were damaged, some extensively with loss of cattle.
F2 W of Fullerton Merrick, Nance 0023 13 miles (21 km) Ten farms were damaged, with farmhouses damaged at four of them.
F1 NE of Boone Boone 0025 1.5 miles (2.4 km)
F1 SE of Fullerton Nance 0030 2 miles (3.2 km)
F1 Newman Grove area Madison 0045 0.2 miles (320 m)
F1 SE of Battle Creek Madison 0130 0.6 miles (0.97 km)
F3 N of Carleton to SE of Exeter Thayer, Fillmore 0145 25 miles (40 km) A large hog facility and outbuildings were destroyed. A mobile home was destroyed as well. Rated F2 by Grazulis.
F3 NE of Chester Thayer 0145 13 miles (21 km) Tornado clipped Chester, where trees, outbuildings and propane tanks were damaged. Several farmsteads were damaged outside of town as well. Rated F2 by Grazulis.
F1 N of Bancroft Thurston 0401 1.5 miles (2.4 km)
Texas
F0 NE of Lusk Throckmorton 2330 0.2 miles (320 m)
Missouri
F2 SE of Pleasant Hope Polk 0330 2 miles (3.2 km) Five homes and 16 barns were damaged.
Sources: NOAA Storm Data Tornado History Project Storm Data - March 13, 1990[6]

Hesston and Goessel tornado family

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Hesston and Goessel tornado family
Tornado family
Tornadoes3
Maximum ratingF5 tornado
Highest winds300 mph (480 km/h) to 350 mph (560 km/h)
Overall effects
Casualties2 fatalities, ≥59 injuries
Areas affectedCentral Kansas

Part of the tornado outbreaks of 1990

The F5 tornadoes that struck Hesston and Goessel were both spawned by the same supercell thunderstorm. They were part of what is known as a tornado family; a family that included several additional touchdowns after the Goessel storm dissipated.[7]

The first tornado of the Hesston storm touched down at approximately 4:34 p.m. CDT just to the northeast of Pretty Prairie. It was initially between 200 and 500 yards in diameter, and caused minimal (F1-F2) damage as it churned between Castleton and the Cheney Reservoir. Photographic evidence suggests significant widening as the tornado approached Haven and the Arkansas River. The damage path ranged between 1/2 and 3/4 miles near Haven, and several homes were completely demolished indicating F4 damage. Had the tornado moved through a more populated area in this stage of its life, it is likely that it would have caused much more dramatic damage. Fairly constant F3 damage was produced from Haven to Burrton and to the Little Arkansas River. The path width remained over 0.5 miles (0.80 km) in diameter.

Northeast of the Little Arkansas, the track abruptly decreased in width from 0.5 miles (0.80 km) to just over 300 yards (270 m). Photographs suggest what appears to be a re-organization of the tornadic circulation; initially a wedge like appearance, the funnel quickly became tall and narrow. The most significant damage was done in this stage, however. The tornado plowed into the town of Hesston, just northwest of Newton on I-135. A total of 226 homes and 21 businesses were destroyed, and several were swept completely from their foundations with only slabs and empty basements remaining. A few of the homes were anchor-bolted to their foundations. Several industrial buildings were also obliterated, trees in town were completely shredded, and vehicles were thrown and severely mangled or stripped down to their frames. Portions of the damage path in Hesston were rated F5. 20 farms were torn apart in rural areas outside of town. Light debris from Hesston was found 115 miles (185 km) away in Nebraska. One person died and 59 people were injured.

The series of events that occurred as the tornado moved past the Hesston area were most interesting. Eyewitness accounts observed the touchdown of an additional tornado just to the north. This is consistent with models of what is known as a "tornado handoff", in which an old mesocyclone and tornado occlude as a new mesocyclone and tornado further downwind becomes dominant.[8] Over the course of a few miles, the new tornado intensified and the original one abruptly constricted and apparently became a satellite tornado to the new tornado. Eventually, the Hesston tornado (after traveling nearly 48 miles (77 km)) occluded and merged with the new tornado, and the supercell began to re-intensify. The new tornado rapidly became very large, and violent damage was produced by the second tornado in Marion County. Several homes were again obliterated and completely swept away. An elderly woman was killed when the tornado cleanly swept away her army barracks that was converted into a home, but without a basement. The tornado produced very severe cycloidal ground scouring in farm fields, and damage near the town of Goessel was "extreme F5" according to NWS damage surveyors. The severity of the damage left behind by this tornado led some meteorologists to believe that the Goessel tornado was among the strongest ever documented at that time. The storm passed Goessel, clipped the northwestern portion of Hillsboro, then dissipated just NE of Risley, approximately 22 miles (35 km) from its genesis.[9][10][11]

The same supercell would produce another long-tracked F2 tornado that damaged many farms and destroyed four homes on the southern side of Dwight.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "The March 13, 1990 Great Plains Tornado Outbreak". National Weather Service. National Weather Service in Norman, Oklahoma. Retrieved April 30, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d Jonathan Davies; Charles Doswell; Donald Burgess; John Weaver (June 1, 1994). "Some Noteworthy Aspects of the Hesston, Kansas, Tornado Family of 13 March 1990". Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 75 (6): 1007. Bibcode:1994BAMS...75.1007D. doi:10.1175/1520-0477(1994)075<1007:SNAOTH>2.0.CO;2. Retrieved April 30, 2022.
  3. ^ Anthony (March 13, 1990). "Day 1 Convective Outlook". Iowa Environmental Mesonet. Retrieved April 30, 2022.
  4. ^ Smith (March 13, 1990). "Day 1 Convective Outlook". Iowa Environmental Mesonet. Retrieved April 30, 2022.
  5. ^ "The March 13, 1990 Tornado Outbreak". National Weather Service. National Weather Service in Hastings, Nebraska. Retrieved April 30, 2022.
  6. ^ Thomas P. Grazulis (July 1993). Significant Tornadoes 1680-1991. St. Johnsbury, Vermont: The Tornado Project of Environmental Films. ISBN 1-879362-03-1.
  7. ^ Jonathan M. Davies; C. A. Doswell; D. W. Burgess; J. F. Weaver (1994). "Some Noteworthy Aspects of the Hesston, Kansas, Tornado Family of 13 March 1990". Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc. 75 (6): 1007–1017. Bibcode:1994BAMS...75.1007D. doi:10.1175/1520-0477(1994)075<1007:SNAOTH>2.0.CO;2.
  8. ^ Marshall, Tim (1995). Storm Talk. David Hoadley (illust.). Texas.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  9. ^ Thomas P. Grazulis (July 1993). Significant Tornadoes 1680-1991. St. Johnsbury, Vermont: The Tornado Project of Environmental Films. ISBN 1-879362-03-1.
  10. ^ Michael Smith (April 20, 1990). "Kansas twister might be the strongest ever recorded". Fort Scott Tribune. unknown. Retrieved November 6, 2013.
  11. ^ US Department of Commerce, NOAA. "Top Ten KS Tornadoes". www.weather.gov. Retrieved 2024-07-24.
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