Meteorologists awed by extremely rare type of tornado and weird radar sights - KTVZ (2024)

By Mary Gilbert, CNN Meteorologist

(CNN) — Powerful storms roared across parts of southern Oklahoma Tuesday night and produced dangerous and unusual tornadoes, including one incredibly rare type.

Multiple tornadoes were ongoing simultaneously in Tillman County, Oklahoma, when the weather got weird.

At least two of the tornadoes exhibited very odd behavior: one powerful tornado looped backward and recrossed its previous path and anothersignificanttornado spun in the “wrong” direction.

“You certainly don’t see this every day,” Rick Smith, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Norman, Oklahoma, told CNN.

Even stranger, the tornadoes appear to have emerged from the same powerful thunderstorm.

Here’s how it played out.

A wild night in Oklahoma

A supercell thunderstorm – a powerful type of storm responsible for most severe weather – roared to life near the Oklahoma-Texas border and tracked east. This storm produced a “large and extremely dangerous” tornado north of Loveland, Oklahoma, just before 10 p.m. CDT, according to a weather service warning.

Radar imagery shows the tornado tracking east before slowing down considerably, taking a turn to the north, then to the west, and looping over where it had just hit.

Storms generally move from west to east, but powerful tornadoes can sometimes curve back to the west as they lose strength, according to Smith. What’s much more uncommon in this situation is that the tornado completed a full loop back over its own path.

An EF5 tornado that decimated the town of Greensburg, Kansas, in May 2007 is perhaps the most devastating example of a looping track. The tornado demolished the town and then looped back just north of the worst damage.

Tuesday night’s spiraling tornado weakened as it completed its pirouette near Loveland, but a new issue then emerged: a new, powerful anticyclonic tornado spun up on the southern edge of the same storm. It’s likely these two tornadoes were briefly active at the same time, Smith said.

Tornadoes in the Northern Hemisphere typically spin cyclonically, or counter-clockwise, but this new tornado was spinning clockwise, or anti-cyclonically. Only about 1% of tornadoes are estimated to be anticyclonic, according to the weather service.

Tuesday night’s anticyclonic tornado was one for the history books on several fronts.

Just before 10:30 p.m. CDT the “large and extremely dangerous” anticyclonic tornado formed southeast of Loveland where it was briefly “nearly stationary or moving very slowly south,” according to weather service warnings.

“It’s not common to see (tornadoes) be nearly stationary,” Smith explained. “Tornadoes are almost always going to just go wherever the supercell thunderstorm goes.”

But select storms on Tuesday night were barely moving and created an environment where it was possible for a tornado to develop, loiter, then redevelop, according to Smith.

Not only was this tornado churning in the “wrong” direction while hardly moving forward, it also produced tell-tale damage signatures on radar imagery that meant it lifted debris thousands of feet into the air, a sign of a strong tornado. Most anticyclonic tornadoes are weak and short-lived, meaning this twister was rare on two fronts.

Luckily, the erratic twisters unfolded over a sparsely populated area and there are no reports of injuries, deaths or significant structural damage, the Tillman County Emergency Management office said Wednesday afternoon.

Additional severe thunderstorms are possible from Texas to Nebraska Wednesday. Some of these storms may produce tornadoes, including in the same areas of southwestern Oklahoma hit by Tuesday night’s storms.

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Meteorologists awed by extremely rare type of tornado and weird radar sights - KTVZ (2024)

FAQs

What is the rarest type of tornado? ›

Twin tornadoes

One of the rarest tornadic phenomena that even some veteran storm chasers have never witnessed are twins when two bona fide tornadoes form side by side.

What do meteorologists look for in the radar that is very indicative of a tornado? ›

A “hook echo” describes a pattern in radar reflectivity images that looks like a hook extending from the radar echo, usually in the right-rear part of the storm (relative to the motion of the storm). A hook is often associated with a mesocyclone and indicates favorable conditions for tornado formation.

What is a special type of radar meteorologists could use to predict when a tornado might touch down? ›

A Doppler radar can detect wind speed and direction, rotation often signifies tornadic development. Once a tornado is detected, both radars and satellites are used to track the storm. Satellite images often show details of tornado damage, especially from high resolution POES images as seen below.

Is there a tornado that has happened in the past that was extremely rare? ›

NWS Los Angeles: Damaging, high-end EF-1 tornado hit L.A. County. NWS Los Angeles Meteorologist Ariel Cohen provides an update on the rare EF-1 tornado that tore through Montebello, California on Wednesday.

Can a dust devil hurt you? ›

Dust devils typically do not cause injuries, but rare, severe dust devils have caused damage and even deaths in the past.

Has there ever been an F6 tornado? ›

In total, two tornadoes received the rating of F6, but both were later downgraded to F5. Based on aerial photographs of the damage it caused, Fujita assigned the strongest tornado of the 1974 Super Outbreak, which affected Xenia, Ohio, a preliminary rating of F6 intensity ± 1 scale.

Does purple on radar mean tornado? ›

However, modern radar systems can also indicate debris balls, a sign of a tornado on the ground. As debris is highly reflective, the debris ball will appear as a darker red or even purple area at the center of the red area.

How to tell if a tornado is forming on radar? ›

While analyzing radar data, if rotational couplets are seen at multiple levels in a storm and they persist for 10 or more minutes, tornado formation is possible, and a tornado warning is imminent.

What does a black dot mean on a weather radar? ›

Black dots represent divergence centers. Arrow length is proportional to wind speed. Negative (positive) Doppler velocities represent flow toward (away from) the radar. (

What does a hook echo look like? ›

A Hook Echo signature is usually a hook-like appendage to the low-level radar reflectivity echo of a supercell. The Hook Echo is located in the vicinity of the updraft, typically on the left-rear flank of cyclonic storms in the southern hemisphere, underneath a sloping echo overhang and below the storm's echo top.

What was the deadliest tornado ever to hit the United States? ›

Deadliest single tornado in US history

The Tri-State tornado of March 18, 1925, killed 695 people in Missouri (11), Illinois (613), and Indiana (71).

What continent does not have tornadoes? ›

Tornadoes have been recorded on all continents except Antarctica. They are most common in the middle latitudes where conditions are often favorable for convective storm development.

What is the most rare type of tornado? ›

Tornadoes in the Northern Hemisphere typically spin cyclonically, or counter-clockwise, but this new tornado was spinning clockwise, or anti-cyclonically. Only about 1% of tornadoes are estimated to be anticyclonic, according to the weather service.

Has there ever been a super tornado? ›

Fifty years after the Super Tornado Outbreak of April 3-4, 1974 left trails of destruction across a wide swath of the eastern US, the twisters are still vivid in survivors' minds. It is still known as the "worst tornado outbreak in United States history," according to the NWS.

What is the heaviest thing a tornado has lifted? ›

What is the heaviest thing a tornado has ever picked up? The Pampa, Texas tornado moved machinery that weighted more that 30,000 pounds. Whether it was slid or picked up, we don't know. A tornado would certainly have no trouble tossing a 2000 -3000 pound van into the air.

What's the worst type of tornado? ›

Supercell Tornadoes

Tornadoes that come from a supercell thunderstorm are the most common, and often the most dangerous. A rotating updraft is a key to the development of a supercell, and eventually a tornado.

What was the scariest tornado? ›

This article lists various tornado records. The most "extreme" tornado in recorded history was the Tri-State tornado, which spread through parts of Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana on March 18, 1925.

What is a F12 tornado? ›

An F12 tornado would have winds of about 740 MPH, the speed of sound. Roughly 3/4 of all tornadoes are EF0 or EF1 tornadoes and have winds that are less than 100 MPH. EF4 and EF5 tornadoes are rare but cause the majority of tornado deaths.

What is the highest category tornado? ›

What Is the Difference Between the Fujita and Enhanced Fujita Scale?
Fujita ScaleWind Speed (mph)Damage Intensity
F-2113-172Significant
F-3158-206Severe
F-4207-260Devastating
F-5261-261-318Incredible
2 more rows
Apr 12, 2024

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