Dayton Daily News

Ohio tornado count climbs in August

- Eric Elwell WHIO Storm Center 7 Chief Meteorolog­ist

The return of much-needed rain in the region has eased drought conditions and brought about unusual springlike severe storms resulting in a record breaking number of tornadoes for August in Ohio and Indiana.

There were over two dozen tornadoes across the two states with eleven tornadoes touching down on Wednesday. This broke a record in Ohio for the number of August, single-day tornadoes. The previous record was seven touchdowns on Aug. 28, 2006. This tornado outbreak was the largest tornado outbreak for the month of August in the United States since 1950 that was not produced by a tropical storm or hurricane. According to data from the Storm Prediction Center, Ohio has had 31 tornado touch-downs this year. That is quite the uptick in the number of tornadoes when we’ve only had 27 tornado touch downs in the last two years combined.

So why have we seen an uptick in the amount of severe weather lately? It turns out that extreme humidity is likely one key reason. After a dry middle of summer, a large area of high pressure has managed to set up off the East Coast near Bermuda. The clock-wise flow around this system has been able to pull up incredible amounts of moisture from the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico into the Ohio Valley. This moisture is in the form of high humidity which helps fuel strong to severe storms.

Last week, the amount of moisture in the air that can be used to generate rainfall, call precipital water, was over 200% higher than normal. This moisture combined with energy from decaying storms over the central Plains to produce a rare August tornado outbreak for Indiana and Ohio. The weather environmen­t over the eastern United States has been so unusual that numerical forecast models meteorolog­ists use to aid in forecastin­g have had a difficult time locking on to when strong storms will develop more than beyond about 12 hours out. And while the environmen­t that led to last week’s outbreak turned out to be very unstable, almost all forecast models were not able to simulate tornadic supercells until about the time the first tornado warnings were being issued in Indiana.

Now you’ve likely seen some of the astonishin­g pictures of the damage, including a totally destroyed Starbucks in Kokomo, Ind.

What is even more astonishin­g than the tornado outbreak itself was the fact that no one was seriously injured or even killed. This, after 31 tornadoes,

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