Back-to-back powerful Pacific storm systems to impact the Pacific Northwest and northern California through the end of this week with heavy rain, flooding, strong winds, and higher elevation mountain snow. A strong, long-duration atmospheric river will accompany the Pacific storms, bringing excessive rainfall and flash flooding to southwest Oregon and northwest California through the week. Read More >
National Weather Service Omaha, Nebraska Serving Eastern Nebraska and Southwest Iowa |
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000 ABUS34 KOMA 252137 CCA PNSOMA PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT...CORRECTION NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE OMAHA/VALLEY NE 400 PM CDT TUE MAY 25 2004 ... DAMAGE SURVEY REPORT ON THE HALLAM NEBRASKA TORNADO ... A SURVEY WAS CONDUCTED BY THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN VALLEY,NE OF THE TORNADO THAT STRUCK HALLAM ON SATURDAY,MAY 22ND. THE FOLLOWING IS AN OVERVIEW OF DAMAGE ALONG THE TRACK. THE TORNADO STARTED 2 MILES NORTH OF DAYKIN,NE AND TRAVELED EAST-NORTHEAST TO ABOUT 1 MILE SOUTH OF WESTERN AND CONTINUED TO ABOUT 2 MILES NORTH OF SWANTON. THE TORNADO WAS RATED F0 TO F1 ON THE FUJITA DAMAGE SCALE IN THIS SECTION. MUCH OF THE DAMAGE WAS DUE TO FARM OUTBUILDINGS,GRAIN BINS AND TREES. THE TORNADO REMAINED F0 TO F1 UNTIL IT STRUCK THE SOUTHERN PORTIONS OF WILBER WHERE IT STRENGHTHENED TO F2. ROOFS BLOWN OFF OF HOMES OCCURRED JUST SOUTHEAST OF WILBER. THE TORNADO FROM WILBER TO NORTH OF CLATONIA TO HALLAM GREW TO ITS MOST INTENSE STAGE. THE TORNADO'S PATH WIDTH ALSO INCREASED TO AN UNPRECIDENTED TWO AND ONE-HALF MILES. THE F-SCALE RATING FOR THE STORM WAS F4 FROM ABOUT CLATONIA TO HALLAM. MANY WELL-BUILT HOMES WERE DEMOLISHED. GRAIN BINS,FARM SHEDS AND OUTBUILDINGS,AND TREES WERE DEMOLISHED ALONG THIS SECTION OF THE PATH. HALLAM ITSELF ESCAPED THE STRONGEST WINDS OF THE STORM,WHICH WERE SOUTH OF THE TOWN. NEVERTHELESS,MANY OF THE STRUCTURES IN HALLAM WERE RATED F2 TO F3. THE STORM ALSO TOPPLED HOPPER CARS FROM A FREIGHT TRAIN ON THE WEST SIDE OF THE TOWN. THE TORNADO THEN TRACKED EAST FOR SEVERAL MILES PRIOR TO TURNING NORTHEAST AGAIN. THE STORM NARROWED TO ABOUT A MILE WIDE AS IT PASSED JUST NORTH OF CORTLAND AND ABOUT 2 MILES NORTH OF FIRTH. THE NORRIS SCHOOLS NORTH OF FIRTH RECEIVED SEVERE DAMAGE WITH THE ROOF OF THE MIDDLE SCHOOL AUDITORIUM COLLAPSED AND SEVERAL WALLS CAVED IN. SCHOOL BUSSES WERE TOSSED. SEVERAL HOMES NORTHEAST OF THE SCHOOLS WERE FLATTENED WHERE THE STORM WAS AGAIN RATED F4. DAMAGE CONTINUED NORTHEAST TO HOLLAND AND 2 MILES NORTH OF PANAMA. THE TORNADO WAS SLGHTLY WEAKER IN THIS SECTION (F2 AT THE MOST) AND BEGAN TO NARROW. THE TRACK THEN CURVED MORE TO THE NORTH, JUST TO THE SOUTH OF BENNET WHERE SOME HOMES RECEIVED F3 DAMAGE. AFTER PASSING TO THE SOUTH OF BENNET, THE STORM MOVED BACK TO THE NORTHEAST AND BEGAN TO WEAKEN TO F0 TO F1 STRENGTH. THE TRACK ALSO WAS BECOMING NARROWER. THE TORNADO THEN DISSIPATED 1 MILE WEST OF PALMYRA. IN SUMMARY. F-SCALE RATING: F4 PATH LENGTH: 52 MILES MAXIMUM PATH WIDTH: 2 1/2 MILES THE FUJITA DAMAGE SCALE IS AS FOLLOWS: F0 LESS THAN 73 MPH CHIMNEYS DAMAGED, TREES BROKEN F1 73-112 MPH MOBILE HOMES MOVED OFF FOUNDATIONS OR OVERTURNED F2 113-157 MPH CONSIDERABLE DAMAGE, MOBILE HOMES DEMOLISHED, TREES UPROOTED F3 158-206 MPH ROOF AND WALLS TORN DOWN, TRAINS OVERTURNED, CARS THROWN F4 207-260 MPH WELL-CONSTRUCTED WALLS LEVELED F5 261-318 MPH HOMES LIFTED OFF FOUNDATIONS AND CARRIED SOME DISTANCE, CARS THROWN A LONG DISTANCE. MORE INFORMATION AND PICTURES WILL BE POSTED ON THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WEB SITE AT WWW.CRH.NOAA.GOV/OAX/ BRIAN E. SMITH WARNING COORDINATION METEOROLOGIST NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE OMAHA/VALLEY NE .END
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