23rd Conference on Severe Local Storms

6.6

The June 8, 2005 tornadic bow echo in South Dakota

Ken Harding, NOAA/NWS, Aberdeen, SD; and C. Behnke, T. Kleffman, and R. Knutsvig

On June 8, 2005, a bow echo developed and moved rapidly across central and northeastern South Dakota. Several anemometer readings exceeded 50 m/s during the most intense phase of this bow echo. As the bow echo reached maturity, numerous mesovorticies formed along the leading edge. Several of theses mesovorticies were tornadic, producing damage rated up to F-1. Radar and observational data are used to examine the synoptic and mesoscale environments that lead to this intense tornadic bow echo. The study focuses on the intense straight line winds and the transition to a tornadic bow echo. A detailed storm survey was conducted that correlated the most intense damage with the paths of the leading edge mesovorticies.

extended abstract  Extended Abstract (976K)

wrf recording  Recorded presentation

Supplementary URL: http://weather.gov/aberdeen/june8storm

Session 6, James T. moore Memorial Session on Bow Echo and Derecho Producing Storms
Tuesday, 7 November 2006, 1:30 PM-3:00 PM, St. Louis AB

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