Title: The Hallam, Nebraska Tornado May 22, 2004
1The Hallam, Nebraska TornadoMay 22, 2004
- Brian E. Smith
- NOAAs National Weather Service
- Omaha/Valley, NE
The views expressed are those of the author and
do notnecessarily represent those of the
National Weather Service
2Day 1 Convective Outlook issued 1135 AM
3Crude Surface Chart at 00Z
400Z Soundings from OAX and TOP
5(No Transcript)
6(No Transcript)
722Z Satellite Imagery
8Surface Based Cape and CIN at 22Z
90-3KM Storm Relative Helicity at 22Z
103KM Energy Helicity Index at 00Z
11Lincoln
Bennet
Hallam
Daykin
Beatrice
12The Hallam Tornado
- The storm did not look like a tornado to spotters
and chasers. The fact that the cloud base was
very low, the tornado circulation was very wide,
along with the tornado being rain-wrapped at
times, and darkness setting in made the storm
extremely difficult to identify.
1354 miles long, 2.5 miles wideF4
14Radar at 0004Z
15May 22, 2004A date that was unforgettable
16May 22, 2004A date that was unforgettable
17It does not always look like a tornado!
18(No Transcript)
19833 PM, May 22, 2004
20Radar at 23Z
21833 PM, May 22, 2004
22It does not always look like a tornado!
23(No Transcript)
24Damage in Hallam
25Aerial Photo over Hallam
26(No Transcript)
27Derailed Freight Train in Hallam
28Damage at the Norris School
29MORE PHOTOS OF THE NORRIS SCHOOL
30F-4 Damage South of Hallam
31Bottom Plate stayed bolted down. But studs that
were straight nailed in lifted off.
32What is damage from mesocyclone or tornado?
- Large rain-wrapped tornadoes with low cloud
bases, it may be difficult to discern what is a
tornado. - Reports from Hallam prior to the tornado
striking, indicated only seeing a large rain
shaft. Spotters should be wary of rain shafts in
the mesocyclone area of HP Supercells. Radar
information coordinated with spotter reports are
important. -
33What Worked For This Event?
- The National Weather Service was well aware that
severe weather was possible, and accurate severe
weather outlooks were issued appropriately. - A Conference Call was held prior to the event, to
alert Emergency Managers and Media of a
high-impact event. - The first tornado watch was issued at 345 PM,
valid through 11 PM. This was a long-lived event
that began 600 PM and continued through
Midnight. - No missed events occurred. Average lead time in
Saline county was 17 minutes. Average lead time
in Gage and Lancaster counties averaged 20 to 40
minutes. - A new Severe Weather Product (SVR, TOR, SVS, LSR)
was issued approximately once every 3.8 minutes
during the event. - The event was very well handled, despite a staff
shortage at the WFO.
34Conclusions
- The Hallam storm was a very complex tornado
associated with the HP or hybrid Supercell.
Multiple vortices and satellite vortices added to
the complexity of the storm structure. - The question of whether this tornado was the
widest is questionable. Strong (gtF2) damage was
around 2 ½ miles wide at one point. But this was
based only on a ground survey. - A detailed aerial survey would have provided more
concise answers to the structure and width of the
storm.