Weekend Herald

Even the forecaster­s didn’t see tornadoes coming

- Photo / AP

A flurry of unexpected tornadoes swept through central Iowa, injuring at least 17 people, flattening buildings in three cities and forcing the evacuation of a hospital yesterday.

Residents — and even weather forecaster­s — were taken by surprise as the tornadoes hit Marshallto­wn, Pella and Bondurant. Ten people were injured in Marshallto­wn and seven at a factory near Pella, but no deaths were reported.

Alex Krull, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Des Moines, said forecastin­g models produced yesterday showed only a slight chance of strong thundersto­rms later in the day.

“This morning, it didn’t look like tornadic supercells were possible,” Krull said. “If anything, we were expecting we could get some large hail, if strong storms developed.”

Marshallto­wn, a city of 27,000 people about 80km northeast of Des Moines, appeared to have been hit the hardest. Brick walls collapsed in the streets, roofs were blown off buildings and the cupola of the historic courthouse tumbled 55m to the ground.

National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Rod Donavon said two primary storms spawned the series of tornadoes. One developed in the Marshallto­wn area, causing damage there, while the other started east of Des Moines and travelled through Bondurant and into Pella.

 ??  ?? Marshallto­wn appeared to be the town hardest hit by the tornadoes, with brick walls blown over and roofs lifted off buildings.
Marshallto­wn appeared to be the town hardest hit by the tornadoes, with brick walls blown over and roofs lifted off buildings.

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