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1997 Central Texas tornado outbreak

A deadly tornado outbreak occurred in Central Texas during the afternoon and evening of May 27, 1997, in conjunction with a southwestward-moving cluster of supercell thunderstorms. These storms produced 20 tornadoes, mainly along the Interstate 35 corridor from northeast of Waco to north of San Antonio. The strongest tornado was an F5 tornado that leveled parts of Jarrell, killing 27 people and injuring 12 others. Overall, 30 people were killed and 33 others were hospitalized by the severe weather.

1997 Central Texas tornado outbreak
WSR-88D radar imagery of storms across Central Texas at 3:40 pm CDT[a] on May 27, 1997
TypeTornado outbreak
DurationMay 27, 1997
Highest gust≥261 mph (420 km/h) (F5 Jarrell tornado),[b]
122 mph (196 km/h) (straight-line winds; Kelly Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas)
Tornadoes
confirmed
20 confirmed
Max. rating1F5 tornado
Duration of
tornado outbreak2
7 hours, 2 minutes
Largest hail4.50 in (114 mm)
(Bell and Falls counties)[2]: 197 
Fatalities30 fatalities (28 tornado-related), 33 hospitalizations[3]
Damage$126.6 million (1997 USD)[c]
Power outages≥ 81,000 electricity customers
Areas affectedCentral Texas
1Most severe tornado damage; see Fujita scale
2Time from first tornado to last tornado

Although the atmospheric conditions enabling the event were forecast to be conducive for strong winds and large hail, forecasters did not initially anticipate as much of a risk of strong tornadoes due to the lack of substantial wind shear over the region. Instead, the coalescence of several weather features—including a cold front, a dry line, and a gravity wave—provided locally favorable conditions for rotating thunderstorms and the formation of tornadoes. This peculiar evolution led to the unusual southwestward motion of the storms and the tornadoes they produced.

A tornado watch was first issued at 12:54 p.m.[a] on May 27 for portions of East Texas and western Louisiana; the first tornado touched down at 1:21 p.m. in McLennan County while the final tornado lifted at 8:23 p.m. later that day in Frio County. The 20 tornadoes collectively inflicted at least $126.6 million in damage. The F5 Jarrell tornado was the outbreak's most powerful and deadliest tornado. It destroyed most of the 38-home Double Creek Estates subdivision west of Jarrell where the most extreme damage occurred. Residences were completely dismantled, swept away, and reduced to a concrete slab, while trees in the area were completely shredded and debarked. Fields were scoured to a depth of 18 in (460 mm) and asphalt was torn from roads. Due to the tornado's intensity, the debris was often small in size and beyond recognition. There were four other tornadoes rated F3 or higher. One F3 tornado moved across Cedar Park, damaging parts of the business district and numerous homes in nearby neighborhoods. An F4 tornado struck areas near Lake Travis and caused one fatality. In addition to the tornadoes, the storms also produced large hail and strong straight-line winds; Kelly Air Force Base in San Antonio recorded a 122 mph (196 km/h) wind gust.

Meteorological synopsis edit

Atmospheric setup edit

 
A surface weather analysis of Texas at 2:00 p.m.[a] on May 27 showing the cold front (solid line with pennants), dry line (dashed line with semicircles), gravity wave (solid line), and low-pressure area (L symbol). The alignment of these features produced the local environmental conditions enabling the tornado outbreak.

The severity of the 1997 Central Texas tornado outbreak was predicated on an unusual spatial and temporal alignment of weather features at highly localized scales. The broader environment was not particularly anomalous for the late springtime over Central and East Texas.[4] Unlike conventional tornado outbreaks in Texas, the 1997 outbreak was not associated with a strong trough of low pressure and strong density gradients in the lower troposphere.[5] Instead, the most prominent weather system over the central U.S. at the time was a distant upper-level low centered over Nebraska imparting little influence on atmospheric conditions over Texas.[4]

Consequently, winds in the mid-levels of the troposphere over Texas on May 27 were weak and westerly, ranging from 30 kn (35 mph; 56 km/h) over North Texas to below 15 kn (17 mph; 28 km/h) over Central and South Texas.[4] Winds closer to the surface were also quiescent;[4] the average storm-relative winds within the lowest 6 km (3.7 mi) of the atmosphere as measured in Del Rio, Texas, prior to the onset of storm development was only 6 kn (6.9 mph; 11 km/h).[6] Further aloft at the level of the jet stream, there were two nearby wind speed maxima over northern Mexico and the central Mississippi Valley; this led to strong divergence of air over Texas.[d] Wind shear was negligible within the lowest 6 km (3.7 mi) of the atmosphere contrary to typical tornado outbreaks.[e][4][10]

Despite generally meager winds, the atmosphere was nonetheless thermally energetic. The combination of several days of onshore wind flow from the Gulf of Mexico and the persistence of a capping inversion aloft led to an accumulation of moist air over the state. Dew points soon exceeded 70 °F (21 °C) within the boundary layer,[4] representing ample moisture in the lower levels of the troposphere.[11] Radiosondes launched from Corpus Christi and Fort Worth on the morning of May 27 detected the presence of a robust "elevated mixed layer" of air aloft characterized by steep lapse rates—the change of temperature with height—near the dry adiabatic lapse rate. This contributed to high convective available potential energy (CAPE) exceeding 5,500 J/kg across most of Central and East Texas,[4] denoting a highly unstable atmosphere.[11][f] In some cases CAPE was as high as 6,500 J/kg.[13] The lack of fronts moving across Texas in the 36 hours before the tornado outbreak allowed this instability to remain and spread across much of the state.[14]

Although these conditions were regionally conducive to the development of thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and strong winds, the potential for supercell and tornado development was not initially clear given the lack of wind shear.[4][15]: 4–5  Other metrics and indices used to diagnose tornado potential, such as the Energy Helicity Index, storm-relative helicity, supercell composite parameter, and the significant tornado parameter, were also lower than historically observed environments featuring tornadoes.[16] For instance, the amount of storm-relative helicity within the lowest 3 km (1.9 mi) of the atmosphere—a common measure quantifying the amount of wind shear—was measured as 70 m2/s2 at Corpus Christi and reached 117 m2/s2 according to data from the Rapid Update Cycle computer model; values below 300 m2/s2 are correlated with weak tornadoes.[12] A study published in Monthly Weather Review in 2007 described the environment as being "marginally favorable for supercells and unfavorable for significant, supercellular tornadoes."[17]

Instead, the factors that enabled the eventual tornado outbreak may have transpired at a mesoscale involving several features becoming juxtaposed over Texas. The dry line delineating the boundary between the moist maritime air mass over East Texas and the drier continental air mass farther west remained nearly stationary in the region through the morning of May 27. On the preceding evening, a mesoscale convective system developing along this dry line over eastern Oklahoma and Arkansas generated a well-defined gravity wave that traveled southwest across East Texas on the morning of May 27.[4] Its progression was evidenced on satellite imagery as an advancing band of mid-level cumuli.[4][10] A weak low-pressure area also developed along the dry line near Dallas and tracked southwest along the boundary. In the two days before May 27, a cold front associated with the upper-level low over Nebraska had swept slowly southeast across the central U.S. Prior to dawn on May 27, the front progressed across West Texas; by 7:00 a.m. on May 27, the front spanned from southeastern Oklahoma through the northwestern portion of the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex southwestwards to near the Big Bend of Texas. This placed the cold front parallel and just to the west of the dry line along a northeast to southwest orientation. A swath of clear skies emerged between the two boundaries, maximizing surface heating during the daytime and contributing to the weak low-pressure area's southwestward movement through Central Texas.[4]

Development of storms edit

 
Animation of storms developing over Texas on May 27. The animation alternates between progressing forwards and backwards in time.

At around 12:30 p.m., the gravity wave, cold front, dry line, and low-pressure area overlapped near Waco, Texas, with the faster cold front overtaking and merging with the nearly stationary dry line.[4] The cold front and dry line were brought together in a northeast to southwest fashion resembling a zipper.[18] Thunderstorms formed near Waco in tandem with this juxtaposition of features and within a local maximum of surface heating and convergence of moist air.[4] While some storms had spawned along the cold front, the gravity wave's passage in the early afternoon hours coincided with a rapid intensification of the first thunderstorms.[10] The arrival of the gravity wave and its perpendicular alignment relative to the orientation of the cold front and dry line may have enhanced wind shear locally despite weak wind shear at a broader, synoptic scale. This allowed the thunderstorms to rotate and become supercells.[4]

However, the degree to which the wave contributed to the formation of supercells and eventually tornadoes remains a subject of disagreement among meteorologists.[19] The development of new discrete supercells followed the advancing intersection of the cold front and dry line and the gravity wave as they continued southwest,[4][20] though each individual storm was nearly stationary.[21] Due to the westerly winds in the mid-levels of the troposphere, the outflow from each developing storm was directed east, allowing each new thunderstorm to develop and rotate without interference from the initial storms.[4] The direction of the storms' expansion towards the southwest deviated over 100 degrees away from these westerly winds, representing an extreme and highly unusual motion.[22] The southwestward generation of storms brought them towards increasingly unstable air with higher CAPE, allowing the storms to acquire strong inflow and the requisite rotation to produce tornadoes.[23]

There were at least three families of thunderstorms that developed as part of the initial southwestward-moving complex of storms,[24] composed of at least 16 distinct supercells; six of the cells formed along the cold front, five formed along the dry line, and five formed along the gust front imparted by previous storms.[25] The gust fronts pushed outwards by the downdrafts of the thunderstorms served as foci for tornadogenesis; boundaries like gust fronts can provide low-level vorticity and rising air necessary for the formation of tornadoes.[26] Some of the day's tornadoes were spun up by the gust front itself while others spawned from thunderstorms with preexisting mesocyclones aloft enhanced by the gust front underneath.[27]

The day's first thunderstorm near Waco in McLennan County strengthened quickly in response to the highly unstable atmosphere. A severe thunderstorm warning—the first of the day—was issued for the county at 12:50 p.m. Weather radars showed increasing rotation within the storm, prompting the issuance of a tornado warning at 1:21 p.m. This storm produced the outbreak's first tornado 5 mi (8.0 km) southwest of Hewitt near Lorena. The same storm produced a second brief tornado near Bruceville followed by a third, intense F3 tornado in southwestern McLennan County that lasted for 20 minutes.[28] A new thunderstorm developed along the flanking line associated with the first storm. This second storm spawned several tornadoes as it expanded towards the southwest, including an F3 tornado near Lake Belton beginning at 2:25 p.m. and the F5 Jarrell tornado beginning at 3:25 p.m.[28][24][26] The NEXRAD radar in Granger used to monitor this storm suffered a power failure and went out of commission at 3:38 p.m.[29][30] A control switch left in an improper position on a prior maintenance visit prevented its emergency power supply from activating.[30] Thunderstorms developing to the southwest later in the afternoon and evening produced additional tornadoes, including the F3 tornado that struck Cedar Park and the F4 tornado that struck Lakeway.[15][26] The Lakeway tornado was the first instance of an F4 tornado striking Travis County on record.[5] The final tornado of the day touched down in Frio County and lifted at 7:23 p.m.[15]: 2 [2]: 214 

Farther south away from the southwestward-moving storm cluster, the cold front and dry line curved west, making them parallel to the advancing gravity wave; this triggered the development of numerous and intense storms between Austin and the Big Bend after 3:00 p.m. when the gravity wave intersected the front. The parallel orientations of the wave and the other boundaries precluded these storms' rotation.[4] They tracked east and eventually merged with the southwestward-propagating complex of tornadic storms along the Pedernales River. This coalescence produced a south- and southeastward-moving squall line and ended the strong tornado activity. Nonetheless, strong and damaging winds were produced by the squall line for several hours. Kelly Air Force Base in San Antonio documented a wind gust of 106 kn (122 mph; 196 km/h), marking a record high wind velocity for the site.[31]

Warnings and preparedness edit

The Storm Prediction Center (SPC) forecasted a moderate risk for severe thunderstorms over parts of East Texas in its severe weather outlook issued at 1:03 a.m. on May 27. The moderate risk region included Waco, the Killeen–Temple–Fort Hood metropolitan area, and extended east towards Shreveport, Louisiana, and Fort Polk, Louisiana. Austin was located at the boundary between the moderate risk region and the slight risk region that encompassed most of East and South Texas, including the Hill Country. The SPC predicted that the gravity wave would be a focal point for storms capable of producing large hail and damaging winds given the unstable atmosphere. A subsequent outlook issued by the SPC at 10:16 a.m. continued to indicate a moderate risk for severe weather and mentioned the possibility of isolated and brief tornadoes.[32][33] A tornado watch was later issued by the SPC at 12:54 p.m. for parts of eastern Texas and western Louisiana, citing the unstable airmass in place over the region.[28] The Dallas/Fort Worth and Austin/San Antonio National Weather Service forecast offices also issued bulletins on the morning of May 27 noting the potential for severe weather. However, these early outlooks focused more on the threat of wind and hail rather than tornadoes due to the low wind shear present over the region.[34]

The Dallas/Fort Worth National Weather Service forecast office ultimately issued 10 tornado warnings and 5 severe thunderstorm warnings between 1 and 5 p.m. on May 27. The Austin/San Antonio office issued 8 tornado warnings, 24 severe thunderstorm warnings, and 10 flash flood warnings during the afternoon and evening of May 27, with 80 percent of their issued products occurring after 5 p.m. in connection with the widespread storms that developed later in the day separate from the initial tornadic storms. In one case, a media outlet's decision to manually activate the Emergency Alert System rather than allow weather warnings to automatically trigger it resulted in a 25–30 minute delay in the dissemination of a warning.[34] Interviews conducted by a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration service assessment team found that many watched the approach of tornadoes prior to taking shelter due to their slow movement and high visibility. In the case of the F5 Jarrell tornado, some fled while others took shelter. Due to the strength of the tornado, some who stayed behind were killed despite taking appropriate safety measures.[35]

Confirmed tornadoes edit

Confirmed tornadoes by Fujita rating
FU F0 F1 F2 F3 F4 F5 Total
0 6 6 3 3 1 1 20
List of confirmed tornadoes – Tuesday, May 27, 1997[g]
F# Location County Start Coord. Time (UTC) Path length Max width Damage[c] Summary
F2 W of Lorena McLennan 31°23′N 97°19′W / 31.38°N 97.32°W / 31.38; -97.32 (Lorena (May 27, F2)) 18:21 – 18:33 2 mi (3.2 km) 75 yd (69 m) $75,000 Several large trees were uprooted and a mobile home was destroyed.[36]
F0 Eddy area McLennan 31°18′N 97°15′W / 31.30°N 97.25°W / 31.30; -97.25 (Eddy (May 27, F0)) 18:44 – 18:47 0.2 mi (0.32 km) 40 yd (37 m) Tornado reported by a sheriff deputy caused no damage.[37]
F3 E of Moody McLennan, Bell 31°16′N 97°21′W / 31.27°N 97.35°W / 31.27; -97.35 (Moody (May 27, F3)) 18:46 – 18:59 3.7 mi (6.0 km) 150 yd (140 m) $150,000 Most of the tornado's path occurred in McLennan County. A home and a barn were destroyed on Dowell Road after the tornado initially touched down in open terrain near Farm to Market Road 107; these structures received F3 tornado damage. Another home nearby was also damaged and a pickup truck and car were displaced by several hundred feet. The tornado moved south-southwest, crossing the border between McLennan and Bell counties and traversing open country. There, numerous trees were uprooted. A local news station also captured this tornado and much of its life cycle as it passed within a few miles of their skycam and station.[38][39][40]
F0 WNW of Belton Bell 31°05′N 97°32′W / 31.08°N 97.53°W / 31.08; -97.53 (Belton (May 27, F0)) 19:16 – 19:27 0.2 mi (0.32 km) 50 yd (46 m) Weak tornado remained stationary for much of its existence before dissipating.[41]
F3 N of Belton Bell 31°10′N 97°28′W / 31.17°N 97.47°W / 31.17; -97.47 (Belton (May 27, F3)) 19:27 – 19:45 1.4 mi (2.3 km) 275 yd (251 m) $900,000 The tornado began on the northern shores of Lake Belton at Morgan's Point Resort. A marina was destroyed on the lake's northern shores, leading to the capsizing of 100 boats. Ten homes along the same shore sustained severe damage and trees were destroyed. The tornado then crossed the lake and moved ashore northeast of the community of Woodland, downing many trees and causing heavy damage to at least six structures. The tornado was on the ground for a third of a mile after traversing the lake before lifting.[28][40][42]
F1 SW of Belton Bell 31°01′N 97°32′W / 31.02°N 97.53°W / 31.02; -97.53 (Belton (May 27, F1)) 19:50 – 19:58 0.2 mi (0.32 km) 40 yd (37 m) Brief tornado with unknown damage.[43]
F1 Blooming Grove area Navarro 32°06′N 96°43′W / 32.10°N 96.72°W / 32.10; -96.72 (Blooming Grove (May 27, F1)) 20:05 – 20:10 0.5 mi (0.80 km) 50 yd (46 m) Brief tornado uprooted several large trees.[43]
F1 NW of Prairie Dell Bell 30°54′N 97°35′W / 30.90°N 97.58°W / 30.90; -97.58 (Prairie Dell (May 27, F1)) 20:07 – 20:25 2.4 mi (3.9 km) 100 yd (91 m) $20,000 Initially stationary tornado that began to quickly track towards the south-southwest, destroying trees and damaging several structures.[44]
F2 N of Jarrell Williamson 30°53′05″N 97°35′38″W / 30.8848°N 97.594°W / 30.8848; -97.594 (Jarrell (May 27, F2)) 20:25 – 20:33 2 mi (3.2 km) 200 yd (180 m) First of two tornadoes that preceded the Jarrell F5 tornado.[45]
F2 NW of Jarrell Williamson 30°52′05″N 97°36′11″W / 30.868°N 97.603°W / 30.868; -97.603 (Jarrell (May 27, F2)) 20:35 – 20:39 0.5 mi (0.80 km) 150 yd (140 m) Second of two tornadoes that preceded the Jarrell F5 tornado; classified as a multi-vortex tornado.[46]
F1 S of Dawson Navarro 31°52′N 96°43′W / 31.87°N 96.72°W / 31.87; -96.72 (Dawson (May 27, F1)) 20:36 – 20:40 0.5 mi (0.80 km) 50 yd (46 m) Brief tornado uprooted large trees.[47]
F5 W of Jarrell Williamson 30°50′24″N 97°37′05″W / 30.84°N 97.618°W / 30.84; -97.618 (Jarrell (May 27, F5)) 20:40 – 20:53 5.1 mi (8.2 km) 1,320 yd (1,210 m) $40.1 million 27 deaths – See section on this tornado – 12 others were injured.[48]
F0 SW of Hubbard Hill 31°49′N 96°50′W / 31.82°N 96.83°W / 31.82; -96.83 (Hubbard (May 27, F0)) 20:50 – 20:53 0.2 mi (0.32 km) 40 yd (37 m) Brief tornado caused no damage.[49]
F3 Cedar Park Williamson, Travis 30°33′N 97°49′W / 30.55°N 97.82°W / 30.55; -97.82 (Cedar Park (May 27, F3)) 21:05 – 21:15 9.2 mi (14.8 km) 200 yd (180 m) $70.11 million This tornado moved south through Cedar Park before crossing into Travis County and lifting just northeast of Mansfield Dam. The thunderstorm that spawned the tornado developed along the flanking line of the storm that produced the F5 tornado in Jarrell. It initially touched down in an open area, causing minor shingle damage to a house and damaging a few trees. Before moving into Cedar Park, the tornado caused F1 and F2 damage. Localized F3 damage occurred within Cedar Park's business district. Most of the roofing on an Albertsons grocery store was torn away; the store's walls and doors were also severely damaged or destroyed. At least seven people were injured in the store and one person was hospitalized, though additional injuries were mitigated by the sheltering of customers in the store's refrigeration units under the direction of the store's manager. Several businesses were damaged along US-183; one business lost most of its roof, though damage to most other businesses was minor. A 65,000-pound (29,000 kg) coal tender converted to hold diesel fuel was flipped over and thrown a short distance after a historic train was struck near the highway. The tornado then moved into the Buttercup Creek subdivision in southwestern Cedar Park, inflicting F1–F3 damage to 136 homes. Some homes sustained significant roof loss and severe structural damage; eleven were destroyed. It then curved towards the southwest into Travis County and downed ten percent of trees in a wooded area before lifting 1.1 miles (1.8 km) north of Lake Travis. Fifteen people were injured by the tornado.[40][50][51][52][53][54]
F1 NW of Four Points Travis 30°24′N 97°51′W / 30.40°N 97.85°W / 30.40; -97.85 (Four Points (May 27, F0)) 21:15 – 21:15 0.2 mi (0.32 km) 20 yd (18 m) $5,000 Brief tornado with minimal damage.[55]
F4 W of Lakeway Travis 30°22′N 98°01′W / 30.37°N 98.02°W / 30.37; -98.02 (Lakeway (May 27, F4)) 21:50 – ? 5.6 mi (9.0 km) 440 yd (400 m) $15 million 1 death – The tornado touched down near the shore of Lake Travis, destroying a marina and most of the watercraft at the docks. Trees in the area were contorted and uprooted, though other nearby structure sustained minor damage of F0 severity. Numerous structures sustained varying degrees of damage as the tornado moved westward and later southwestward, including a Southwest Bell telephone building on Bee Creek Road that was destroyed and a home across the road that had several collapsed walls. The destruction of the well-constructed telephone building warranted an F4 rating. The tornado then made a turn towards the southwest roughly 2.2 miles (3.5 km) from Lake Travis, bringing it across a hill where buildings and trees were destroyed. Further southwest, a steel tower carrying high transmission power lines was destroyed. Additional site-built homes, mobile homes, and other buildings were either heavily damaged or completely destroyed in the Hazy Hills subdivision, leaving many uninhabitable. This included well-built homes within the subdivision. One person was killed following the destruction of his mobile home and vehicle, though investigators could not establish whether he was in the home or attempting to evacuate when the tornado struck. The tornado crossed Texas State Highway 71, entering another subdivision near Lick Creek and causing as high as F2 tornado damage to structures in the area, including the complete unroofing of one house near Pedernales Drive. Throughout the tornado's path, numerous trees were downed and 25 homes were destroyed; five people were injured.[40][56][57]
F1 N of Kyle Hays 30°01′N 97°52′W / 30.02°N 97.87°W / 30.02; -97.87 (Kyle (May 27, F1)) 22:38 – 22:45 3.5 mi (5.6 km) 60 yd (55 m) $5,000 Trees and power lines were knocked over.[58]
F0 S of Utopia Uvalde 29°31′N 99°32′W / 29.52°N 99.53°W / 29.52; -99.53 (Utopia (May 27, F0)) 00:00 – 00:03 0.2 mi (0.32 km) 20 yd (18 m) Tornado remained over open country.[59]
F0 NW of Sisterdale Kendall 29°59′N 98°45′W / 29.98°N 98.75°W / 29.98; -98.75 (Sisterdale (May 27, F0)) 00:30 – 00:32 0.7 mi (1.1 km) 30 yd (27 m) Tornado remained over open country.[60]
F0 NE of Moore Frio 29°04′N 99°00′W / 29.07°N 99.00°W / 29.07; -99.00 (Moore (May 27, F0)) 01:20 – 01:23 1 mi (1.6 km) 40 yd (37 m) Tornado remained over open country.[61]

Jarrell, Texas edit

Jarrell tornado
F5 tornado
 
View of the Jarrell tornado as it moved near the Double Creek Estates area
Duration13 minutes
Max. rating1F5 tornado
Fatalities27 fatalities, 12 injuries
Damage$40.1 million
1Most severe tornado damage; see Fujita scale

Parts of Jarrell, Texas, were struck by an extremely powerful F5 tornado on the afternoon of May 27.[5][29] The tornado destroyed approximately 10 percent of the homes in Jarrell;[62]: A1  at the time, the city had a population of about 450 people and had been previously struck by tornadoes in 1987 and 1989.[63]: A1 [64]: A10 [65] Hardest-hit was the Double Creek Estates subdivision west of downtown Jarrell.[15]: 6 [66]: A19  The 1997 Jarrell tornado was the first and only known occurrence of an F5 tornado in Williamson County.[5] It was also the deadliest tornado in Texas since the 1987 Saragosa tornado.[67] The thunderstorm that spawned the Jarrell tornado began west of Temple along the flanking line of another thunderstorm earlier in the afternoon of May 27. The storm produced several tornadoes in Bell County, including the F3 tornado that impacted communities along Lake Belton.[28] Weather radar observed a strengthening mesocyclone within the thunderstorm, with the speed of rotation rising above 40 kn (46 mph; 74 km/h).[29] As the storm moved into Williamson County, it produced two short-lived F2 tornadoes north of Jarrell at 3:25 p.m. and 3:35 p.m.; the latter of the two was a multiple-vortex tornado and lifted at 3:39 p.m.[45][46][15]: 5  The Austin/San Antonio National Weather Service forecast office issued a tornado warning for Williamson County at 3:30 p.m. in response to the storm's approach; the warning was put into effect for one hour. This was the first tornado warning of the day issued for the office's warning area and warned that "the city of Jarrell is in the path of this storm."[68] Local warning sirens went off about 10–12 minutes before the tornado struck.[69]

The precise start of the Jarrell tornado was difficult to pinpoint.[29] The most prominent and destructive part of the tornado's evolution was preceded by the apparition of short-lived, small, and rope-like funnel clouds. These may have been separate tornadoes or simply an earlier part of the Jarrell tornado's evolution.[40]: C3  An aerial survey conducted by the Birmingham, Alabama, office of the National Weather Service included the damage caused by the earlier F2 tornadoes—mostly to trees and roads—as part of the overall Jarrell tornado path.[40]: C3  Some reports also include the F1 tornado near Prairie Dell as an earlier continuation of the Jarrell tornado.[26] The final, unambiguous apparition of the Jarrell tornado began as a narrow and rope-shaped funnel when it touched down at 3:40 p.m with witnesses and photo evidence showing that the tornado had the appearance of a "dead man walking". just within the Williamson County line 3 miles (4.8 km) north of Jarrell.[48][15]: 6  Like the two F3 tornadoes earlier in the day, it developed along the gust front produced by its parent thunderstorm.[26] This mechanism is typical of tornadogenesis not associated with supercell thunderstorms.[70] Traffic along Interstate 35 came to a stop as the tornado descended nearby.[62]: A1  The Texas Highway Patrol also stopped traffic on both sides of the interstate under the expectation that the tornado would cross the highway; it ultimately moved parallel to Interstate 35.[71] Tracking south-southwest,[29] the tornado quickly intensified and grew to a 12 mile (0.80 km) in width, changing from its initial thin and white appearance to a blue and black color.[15]: 6 [62]: A1  F5 tornado damage was identified early in the tornado's path.[40]: C3  Its intense winds scoured the ground and stripped pavement from roads.[15]: 3  The tornado tore 525 feet (160 m) of asphalt as it crossed County Roads 308, 305, and 307;[15]: 6  the thickness of the asphalt pavement was roughly 0.8 inches (20 mm).[72] A culvert plant at the corner of Country Roads 305 and 307 collapsed. Nearby, a similar plant and a mobile home sustained some damage, with the latter struck by a 2×4 piece of lumber. The occupants of a mobile home 500 feet (150 m) north-northwest of the culvert plant fled to a frame house that the tornado later struck; the evacuees were killed while the mobile home sustained only minor damage.[73][63]: A21  Some of the most extreme damage at this location was inflicted to a small metal-framed recycling plant that was obliterated, with little left of the structure besides a few twisted structural beams.[74]

 
The Double Creek Estates subdivision was pulverized by the tornado, with many homes swept off their foundations and disintegrated. This photograph shows one remaining foundation with plumbing pulled out of the concrete.

The tornado then slowly entered the Double Creek Estates subdivision where it exacted its most catastrophic impacts. Concurrently, the tornado expanded further to its maximum width of 34 mile (1.2 km).[15]: 6  Eyewitnesses indicated that the tornado's movement slowed to around 5–10 mph (8.0–16.1 km/h) as it entered the neighborhood; this may have contributed to the resulting extreme destruction.[15]: 7  The tornado destroyed the first home it encountered at the northwestern corner of the subdivision; a clock recovered from the remaining debris was stopped at 3:48 p.m., presumably marking the time the tornado entered the community.[15]: 6  Much of the neighborhood was completely swept away with little debris remaining, with what was left being reduced to small and unrecognizable fragments that were dispersed over a wide area. The lack of large items that were recovered, and the granularity of the debris was indicative of the sheer strength of the tornado.[15]: 7  Due to the tornado's slow movement, homes near the center of its path experienced tornadic winds for approximately three minutes.[1] The mostly wooden-framed residences, some well-built and anchored, were completely obliterated and swept away, leaving behind concrete slab foundations swept clean of all debris.[73][2]: 6  In some cases, parts of outbuilding and house foundations themselves in the subdivision were scoured away, and several were found missing all of their sill plates that connected the wood-frame homes to the foundations.[75][76] Pieces of debris were found deposited in fields miles away from the subdivision, and extreme ground scouring occurred, reducing grassy fields into wide expanses of mud in the most severely affected areas.[2]: 6 [64]: A10 [77] In some cases the ground was scoured out to a depth of 18 inches (46 cm).[19] Vehicles in the neighborhood were tossed and mangled beyond recognition; at least six were found flattened in open areas and coated with mud and grass.[15]: 7 [2]: 5  Some were thrown as far as a 12 mile (0.80 km) away, and others were torn into multiple pieces of unrecognizable metal.[78] Trees in the neighborhood were completely denuded and stripped entirely clean of all bark as well, including one that was found with an electrical cord impaled through the trunk.[15]: 7 [2]: 5 [79]

All 27 fatalities associated with the Jarrell tornado occurred at Double Creek Estates,[15]: 7  which at the time consisted of 131 residents living in 38 single-family homes and several mobile homes.[29][80]: A20  Entire families were killed at Double Creek, including all five members of the Igo Family, all four members of the Moehring family, and all three members of the Smith family.[81] Bodily remains were later found at 30 locations, and the physical trauma inflicted to some of the tornado victims was so extreme, that first responders reportedly had difficulty distinguishing human remains from the remains of animals at the site.[82][83] Most of the deaths were attributed in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report to multiple trauma, though one death was attributed to asphyxia.[3] The high intensity of the Jarrell tornado left those in its path with little recourse;[84] most homes in Double Creek Estates were built on cement slab foundations and few had a basement or any form of storm shelter;[2]: 6  nineteen people sought refuge in a single storm cellar.[63]: A21  Some residents who followed prescribed safety measures nonetheless perished.[85] One survivor holed up in a bathtub and was flung several hundred feet from her house onto a road.[63]: A21  The walls of some homes along the periphery of the tornado path remained intact, protecting some of those who survived the tornado.[84] Others chose to evacuate ahead of the approaching tornado.[85] Forty structures were obliterated in Double Creek Estates.[15]: 7  Three businesses adjacent to Double Creek Estates were also destroyed.[29] In total, the tornado dealt $10–20 million in damage to the neighborhood.[80]: A20  Around 300 cattle grazing in a nearby pasture were killed and some were found 0.25 miles (0.40 km) away.[15]: 7 [2]: 5  Hundreds of cattle were also dismembered and a few cows were also skinned by the tornado.[78][66]: A19 

The tornado turned slightly towards the south-southwest after traversing Double Creek Estates.[15]: 7  The damage in these outlying areas was somewhat scattershot; in one case, a mobile home suffered only minor damage while an adjacent house lost half of its roof.[86] Metal buildings were unroofed along County Road 305 south of Jarrell. The road's guardrail was impaled by wooden planks thrown by the strong winds.[62]: A12  The tornado then again crossed County Road 305 and entered a forest of cedar trees.[87] Some of the damage to the trees suggested that the tornado may have been a multiple-vortex tornado, which was documented by Scott Beckwith, receiving a nickname as a “dead man walking”.[88][89] Shortly after entering this forested area, the path of damage left behind by the tornado ended abruptly, with the National Centers for Environmental Information indicating that it lifted at 3:53 p.m. after remaining on the ground for 13 minutes and 5.1 miles (8.2 km).[48][15]: 7  Other government accounts of the tornado list a total path length of 7.6 miles (12.2 km) after incorporating the preceding tornadoes north of Jarrell and near Prairie Dell.[29][40]: C3  Between May 29 and June 1, the Office of the Federal Coordinator for Meteorological Services and Supporting Research carried out aerial and ground surveys of the tornadic damage in Texas in coordination with the Texas Wing Civil Air Patrol.[90] The Jarrell tornado damage was classified as F5 severity throughout most of the tornado's path.[40]: C3  However, a critique of the Fujita scale published by the National Institute of Standards and Technology suggested that winds between 158–206 mph (254–332 km/h), corresponding to an F3 rating on the scale, were sufficient to explain the damage wrought by the Jarrell tornado.[h][92] The critique noted that some of the homes at Double Creek Estates, although built within the preceding 15 years, exhibited structural weaknesses in their design such as the lack of anchor bolts and steel straps in their foundations.[76] Approximately $40 million in damage was inflicted upon property with another $100,000 inflicted upon crops. Twelve people were injured by the storm in addition to the twenty-seven killed.[48]

Due to the unusual southwestward motion of the thunderstorm that caused the tornado, the sequence of weather events experienced by those affected was in the opposite order of typical tornadic events: the tornado arrived first, followed by the hail, wind, and rain of the parent thunderstorm.[15]: 7  Despite the violence of the tornado and the presence of its associated mesocyclone aloft, the thunderstorm did not exhibit a distinct hook echo on weather radar typically associated with such tornadoes. This may have also been caused by the unusual southwestward motion of the thunderstorm, resulting in the tornado's placement in an atypical position relative to the thunderstorm's motion.[29]

Non-tornadic effects edit

In addition to the tornadoes, there were 12 reports of large hail in Central Texas received by the National Weather Service during the late afternoon and evening.[5] The largest hail—measuring nearly 4 in (100 mm) in diameter—was recorded in Cedar Park in conjunction with the F3 tornado that hit the city. Damaging hail was also reported in Georgetown beginning at 3:55 p.m. Severe thunderstorms also generated damaging straight-line winds across the Hill Country and South-Central Texas.[15]: 3  Much of these winds were associated with the eventual, non-tornadic line of storms that resulted from the coalescence of the day's earlier storms.[31] Wind gusts ranging between 58–71 mph (93–114 km/h) were recorded in Austin, with the peak 71 mph (114 km/h) wind gust occurring at Robert Mueller Municipal Airport at 4:20 p.m.[15]: 3  There were also unofficial reports of winds reaching as high as 90 mph (140 km/h) to the west of Austin near Lake Travis.[93] Kelly Air Force Base in San Antonio registered a gust of 122 mph (196 km/h) at 8:03 p.m. Gusts reached 61 mph (98 km/h) in Del Rio and overturned a plane at an airport near Seguin.[15]: 3  The storms knocked out power to 60,000 electricity customers in Austin and as many as 21,000 electricity customers serviced by Texas Utilities.[62]: A10  Telephone service for more than 3,000 residents in the Pedernales Valley was disrupted.[57]: A11  The thunderstorms also produced heavy rain that triggered floods in Blanco, Gonzales, Karnes, and Travis counties.[15]: 3  An official rainfall total of 1.44 in (37 mm) was documented in Austin, though 2.5 in (64 mm) of rain fell in nearby Round Rock. The rains caused Brushy Creek to flood beyond its banks as far east as Thorndale.[93] One person drowned in floodwaters along Shoal Creek in Austin.[5] Another person died in Cedar Park of cardiac arrest likely induced by storm-related stress.[3] The Southwestern Insurance Information Service estimated that the totality of the storms' effects inflicted $25–40 million in insured losses; most insured claims originated from Cedar Park.[94]

Aftermath edit

 
The memorial at Jarrell Memorial Park naming the victims of the 1989 and 1997 Jarrell tornadoes

Law enforcement officers from the Texas Department of Public Safety, four municipal police departments, and two county sheriff's offices aided search-and-rescue efforts in the aftermath of the Jarrell tornado.[64]: A10  The Texas National Guard and other volunteers from around Central Texas joined in the search.[75][63]: A21  The Scott & White Blood Center facilitated blood donations.[63]: A21  A temporary shelter was established by the American Red Cross at Jarrell High School for those displaced by the tornado,[64]: A10  providing food and accepting clothes donations.[63]: A21  The agency's relief operations, covering residents of 211 homes, cost an estimated $250,000; community donations covered at least $200,000 of the expenses.[95] The Jarrell Volunteer Fire Department organized a temporary morgue;[64]: A10  the deceased were later brought to the Travis County Forensic Center for identification.[82] Although a death toll of 30 people was initially reported, that figure was later revised to 27; the inflated count was attributed to the dispersion of remains that led some fatalities to be tallied twice.[63]: A21  Carcasses of livestock were buried at Double Creek Estates.

Texas Governor George W. Bush declared Williamson County a disaster area; Bush visited Jarrell on May 28 and described the tornadic damage as the worst he had ever witnessed.[63]: A21  U.S. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison also visited Jarrell and Cedar Park.[52] Bush later requested federal aid for Williamson and Bell counties with support from Hutchinson.[96] The Federal Emergency Management Agency elected not to provide federal aid, citing the contributions from private and state sources.[97]: A8  Instead, the Small Business Administration and U.S. Department of Agriculture made available loans for the rebuilding of homes, farms, and ranches.[97] The U.S. Congress approved a relief bill allocating $5.4 billion for 35 states affected by natural disasters, including Texas. However, the bill also included other provisions that led President Bill Clinton to veto the bill.[98] A drive-through donation line was established at Auditorium Shores in Austin.[99]: A1  Local musicians organized and performed at a benefit concert at Austin Music Hall, attracting an audience of 2,800 and raising about $94,000.[100][101] Businesses also donated to the relief efforts.[99]: A7 

First responders representing Cedar Park, Austin, Leander, Round Rock, and Williamson and Travis counties arrived in Cear Park shortly after the city was hit by a tornado. Texas A&M University supplied equipment for search-and-rescue operations in the aftermath of the Cedar Park tornado.[62]: A10  These operations were the first test of the 186-member Texas Urban Search and Rescue Team, which was created following the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing.[102] Vouchers were distributed by the American Red Cross to storm victims in the Buttercup Creek subdivision for clothing, food, and other supplies.[52] Texas State Troopers blocked areas of Buttercup Creek to prevent looting.[62]: A10 

A memorial was erected in downtown Jarrell bearing the names of the 27 people killed by the Jarrell tornado. The Jarrell Memorial Park was established near Double Creek Estates on the land of the former Igo family, who perished in the tornado. The park contains 27 trees planted in honor of the victims. In 2019, the memorial was relocated to the park along with the city's historical marker.[103][104] The events and survivor accounts of the tornado were profiled in television documentaries such as the 1999 episode of HBO's America Undercover series titled "Fatal Twisters: A Season of Fury",[105][106] the 1999 BBC television series titled Twister Week (also known as Tornado Diary in the United States) in an episode titled "Tornado Alley",[107] the seventh episode of the Discovery Channel program Storm Warning, produced by GRB Entertainment,[108] and the 2006 documentary Ultimate Disaster (also known as Mega Disaster) on National Geographic Channel.[109]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c All times in Central Daylight Time (UTC-5:00) unless otherwise noted.
  2. ^ The Jarrell tornado was rated as an F5 tornado on the Fujita scale, corresponding to peak gusts of 261–318 mph (420–512 km/h). These winds were estimated from the damage and not directly measured.[1]
  3. ^ a b All damage totals are in 1997 USD unless otherwise noted.
  4. ^ The divergence of air at the upper-levels of the troposphere promotes upward motion and aids thunderstorm development.[7]
  5. ^ Wind shear—a change of wind velocities with height—is necessary to produce rotating thunderstorms, making it a key physical condition for the development of tornadoes.[8][9]
  6. ^ Environments with thunderstorms often exhibit CAPE exceeding 1,000 J/kg, with extreme cases exhibiting CAPE greater than 5,000 J/kg.[12]
  7. ^ All dates are based on Central Daylight Time (UTC-05:00); however, all times are in Coordinated Universal Time for consistency.
  8. ^ These winds would correspond to an EF3–EF5 tornado on the modern Enhanced Fujita Scale.[91] The critique noted that the winds corresponding to an F3 tornado in the Fujita scale would completely destroy most homes.

References edit

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  105. ^ "'FATAL TWISTERS' ISN'T ABOUT STORMS, IT'S ABOUT PAIN". Orlando Sentinel. July 11, 1999. Retrieved September 28, 2021.
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Bibliography edit

  • Henderson, James H.; Hakkarinen, Ida M.; Lerner, William H.; McLaughlin, Melvin R.; Looney, James M.; McIntyre, E. L.; Peters, Brian E.; Trainor, Marilu; Paz, Enrique; Kolavic, Shellie Ann; Zane, David; Phan, Long T. (April 1998). The Central Texas Tornadoes of May 27, 1997 (PDF) (Service Assessment). Silver Spring, Maryland: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved April 7, 2021.
  • Houston, Adam L.; Wilhelmson, Robert B. (March 1, 2007). "Observational Analysis of the 27 May 1997 Central Texas Tornadic Event. Part I: Prestorm Environment and Storm Maintenance/Propagation". Monthly Weather Review. 135 (3). American Meteorological Society: 701–726. Bibcode:2007MWRv..135..701H. doi:10.1175/MWR3300.1.
  • Houston, Adam L.; Wilhelmson, Robert B. (March 1, 2007). "Observational Analysis of the 27 May 1997 Central Texas Tornadic Event. Part II: Tornadoes". Monthly Weather Review. 135 (3). American Meteorological Society: 727–735. Bibcode:2007MWRv..135..727H. doi:10.1175/MWR3301.1.
  • Morgan, Carl; Orrock, Jeff; Rydell, Nezette; Ward, Jimmy (July 1998). "A Meteorological and Radar Analysis of the Central Texas Tornado Outbreak on May 27, 1997" (PDF). New Braunfels, Texas: National Weather Service. Retrieved April 6, 2021 – via NOAA Institutional Repository.
  • Phan, Long T.; Simiu, Emil (July 1998). The Fujita Tornado Intensity Scale: A Critique Based on Observations of the Jarrell Tornado of May 27, 1997 (PDF). Gaithersburg, Maryland: National Institute of Standards and Technology. Retrieved April 7, 2021.

External links edit

1997, central, texas, tornado, outbreak, deadly, tornado, outbreak, occurred, central, texas, during, afternoon, evening, 1997, conjunction, with, southwestward, moving, cluster, supercell, thunderstorms, these, storms, produced, tornadoes, mainly, along, inte. A deadly tornado outbreak occurred in Central Texas during the afternoon and evening of May 27 1997 in conjunction with a southwestward moving cluster of supercell thunderstorms These storms produced 20 tornadoes mainly along the Interstate 35 corridor from northeast of Waco to north of San Antonio The strongest tornado was an F5 tornado that leveled parts of Jarrell killing 27 people and injuring 12 others Overall 30 people were killed and 33 others were hospitalized by the severe weather 1997 Central Texas tornado outbreakWSR 88D radar imagery of storms across Central Texas at 3 40 pm CDT a on May 27 1997TypeTornado outbreakDurationMay 27 1997Highest gust 261 mph 420 km h F5 Jarrell tornado b 122 mph 196 km h straight line winds Kelly Air Force Base San Antonio Texas Tornadoesconfirmed20 confirmedMax rating1F5 tornadoDuration oftornado outbreak27 hours 2 minutesLargest hail4 50 in 114 mm Bell and Falls counties 2 197 Fatalities30 fatalities 28 tornado related 33 hospitalizations 3 Damage 126 6 million 1997 USD c Power outages 81 000 electricity customersAreas affectedCentral Texas1Most severe tornado damage see Fujita scale2Time from first tornado to last tornadoAlthough the atmospheric conditions enabling the event were forecast to be conducive for strong winds and large hail forecasters did not initially anticipate as much of a risk of strong tornadoes due to the lack of substantial wind shear over the region Instead the coalescence of several weather features including a cold front a dry line and a gravity wave provided locally favorable conditions for rotating thunderstorms and the formation of tornadoes This peculiar evolution led to the unusual southwestward motion of the storms and the tornadoes they produced A tornado watch was first issued at 12 54 p m a on May 27 for portions of East Texas and western Louisiana the first tornado touched down at 1 21 p m in McLennan County while the final tornado lifted at 8 23 p m later that day in Frio County The 20 tornadoes collectively inflicted at least 126 6 million in damage The F5 Jarrell tornado was the outbreak s most powerful and deadliest tornado It destroyed most of the 38 home Double Creek Estates subdivision west of Jarrell where the most extreme damage occurred Residences were completely dismantled swept away and reduced to a concrete slab while trees in the area were completely shredded and debarked Fields were scoured to a depth of 18 in 460 mm and asphalt was torn from roads Due to the tornado s intensity the debris was often small in size and beyond recognition There were four other tornadoes rated F3 or higher One F3 tornado moved across Cedar Park damaging parts of the business district and numerous homes in nearby neighborhoods An F4 tornado struck areas near Lake Travis and caused one fatality In addition to the tornadoes the storms also produced large hail and strong straight line winds Kelly Air Force Base in San Antonio recorded a 122 mph 196 km h wind gust Contents 1 Meteorological synopsis 1 1 Atmospheric setup 1 2 Development of storms 2 Warnings and preparedness 3 Confirmed tornadoes 3 1 Jarrell Texas 4 Non tornadic effects 5 Aftermath 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksMeteorological synopsis editAtmospheric setup edit nbsp A surface weather analysis of Texas at 2 00 p m a on May 27 showing the cold front solid line with pennants dry line dashed line with semicircles gravity wave solid line and low pressure area L symbol The alignment of these features produced the local environmental conditions enabling the tornado outbreak The severity of the 1997 Central Texas tornado outbreak was predicated on an unusual spatial and temporal alignment of weather features at highly localized scales The broader environment was not particularly anomalous for the late springtime over Central and East Texas 4 Unlike conventional tornado outbreaks in Texas the 1997 outbreak was not associated with a strong trough of low pressure and strong density gradients in the lower troposphere 5 Instead the most prominent weather system over the central U S at the time was a distant upper level low centered over Nebraska imparting little influence on atmospheric conditions over Texas 4 Consequently winds in the mid levels of the troposphere over Texas on May 27 were weak and westerly ranging from 30 kn 35 mph 56 km h over North Texas to below 15 kn 17 mph 28 km h over Central and South Texas 4 Winds closer to the surface were also quiescent 4 the average storm relative winds within the lowest 6 km 3 7 mi of the atmosphere as measured in Del Rio Texas prior to the onset of storm development was only 6 kn 6 9 mph 11 km h 6 Further aloft at the level of the jet stream there were two nearby wind speed maxima over northern Mexico and the central Mississippi Valley this led to strong divergence of air over Texas d Wind shear was negligible within the lowest 6 km 3 7 mi of the atmosphere contrary to typical tornado outbreaks e 4 10 Despite generally meager winds the atmosphere was nonetheless thermally energetic The combination of several days of onshore wind flow from the Gulf of Mexico and the persistence of a capping inversion aloft led to an accumulation of moist air over the state Dew points soon exceeded 70 F 21 C within the boundary layer 4 representing ample moisture in the lower levels of the troposphere 11 Radiosondes launched from Corpus Christi and Fort Worth on the morning of May 27 detected the presence of a robust elevated mixed layer of air aloft characterized by steep lapse rates the change of temperature with height near the dry adiabatic lapse rate This contributed to high convective available potential energy CAPE exceeding 5 500 J kg across most of Central and East Texas 4 denoting a highly unstable atmosphere 11 f In some cases CAPE was as high as 6 500 J kg 13 The lack of fronts moving across Texas in the 36 hours before the tornado outbreak allowed this instability to remain and spread across much of the state 14 Although these conditions were regionally conducive to the development of thunderstorms capable of producing large hail and strong winds the potential for supercell and tornado development was not initially clear given the lack of wind shear 4 15 4 5 Other metrics and indices used to diagnose tornado potential such as the Energy Helicity Index storm relative helicity supercell composite parameter and the significant tornado parameter were also lower than historically observed environments featuring tornadoes 16 For instance the amount of storm relative helicity within the lowest 3 km 1 9 mi of the atmosphere a common measure quantifying the amount of wind shear was measured as 70 m2 s2 at Corpus Christi and reached 117 m2 s2 according to data from the Rapid Update Cycle computer model values below 300 m2 s2 are correlated with weak tornadoes 12 A study published in Monthly Weather Review in 2007 described the environment as being marginally favorable for supercells and unfavorable for significant supercellular tornadoes 17 Instead the factors that enabled the eventual tornado outbreak may have transpired at a mesoscale involving several features becoming juxtaposed over Texas The dry line delineating the boundary between the moist maritime air mass over East Texas and the drier continental air mass farther west remained nearly stationary in the region through the morning of May 27 On the preceding evening a mesoscale convective system developing along this dry line over eastern Oklahoma and Arkansas generated a well defined gravity wave that traveled southwest across East Texas on the morning of May 27 4 Its progression was evidenced on satellite imagery as an advancing band of mid level cumuli 4 10 A weak low pressure area also developed along the dry line near Dallas and tracked southwest along the boundary In the two days before May 27 a cold front associated with the upper level low over Nebraska had swept slowly southeast across the central U S Prior to dawn on May 27 the front progressed across West Texas by 7 00 a m on May 27 the front spanned from southeastern Oklahoma through the northwestern portion of the Dallas Fort Worth metroplex southwestwards to near the Big Bend of Texas This placed the cold front parallel and just to the west of the dry line along a northeast to southwest orientation A swath of clear skies emerged between the two boundaries maximizing surface heating during the daytime and contributing to the weak low pressure area s southwestward movement through Central Texas 4 Development of storms edit nbsp Animation of storms developing over Texas on May 27 The animation alternates between progressing forwards and backwards in time At around 12 30 p m the gravity wave cold front dry line and low pressure area overlapped near Waco Texas with the faster cold front overtaking and merging with the nearly stationary dry line 4 The cold front and dry line were brought together in a northeast to southwest fashion resembling a zipper 18 Thunderstorms formed near Waco in tandem with this juxtaposition of features and within a local maximum of surface heating and convergence of moist air 4 While some storms had spawned along the cold front the gravity wave s passage in the early afternoon hours coincided with a rapid intensification of the first thunderstorms 10 The arrival of the gravity wave and its perpendicular alignment relative to the orientation of the cold front and dry line may have enhanced wind shear locally despite weak wind shear at a broader synoptic scale This allowed the thunderstorms to rotate and become supercells 4 However the degree to which the wave contributed to the formation of supercells and eventually tornadoes remains a subject of disagreement among meteorologists 19 The development of new discrete supercells followed the advancing intersection of the cold front and dry line and the gravity wave as they continued southwest 4 20 though each individual storm was nearly stationary 21 Due to the westerly winds in the mid levels of the troposphere the outflow from each developing storm was directed east allowing each new thunderstorm to develop and rotate without interference from the initial storms 4 The direction of the storms expansion towards the southwest deviated over 100 degrees away from these westerly winds representing an extreme and highly unusual motion 22 The southwestward generation of storms brought them towards increasingly unstable air with higher CAPE allowing the storms to acquire strong inflow and the requisite rotation to produce tornadoes 23 There were at least three families of thunderstorms that developed as part of the initial southwestward moving complex of storms 24 composed of at least 16 distinct supercells six of the cells formed along the cold front five formed along the dry line and five formed along the gust front imparted by previous storms 25 The gust fronts pushed outwards by the downdrafts of the thunderstorms served as foci for tornadogenesis boundaries like gust fronts can provide low level vorticity and rising air necessary for the formation of tornadoes 26 Some of the day s tornadoes were spun up by the gust front itself while others spawned from thunderstorms with preexisting mesocyclones aloft enhanced by the gust front underneath 27 The day s first thunderstorm near Waco in McLennan County strengthened quickly in response to the highly unstable atmosphere A severe thunderstorm warning the first of the day was issued for the county at 12 50 p m Weather radars showed increasing rotation within the storm prompting the issuance of a tornado warning at 1 21 p m This storm produced the outbreak s first tornado 5 mi 8 0 km southwest of Hewitt near Lorena The same storm produced a second brief tornado near Bruceville followed by a third intense F3 tornado in southwestern McLennan County that lasted for 20 minutes 28 A new thunderstorm developed along the flanking line associated with the first storm This second storm spawned several tornadoes as it expanded towards the southwest including an F3 tornado near Lake Belton beginning at 2 25 p m and the F5 Jarrell tornado beginning at 3 25 p m 28 24 26 The NEXRAD radar in Granger used to monitor this storm suffered a power failure and went out of commission at 3 38 p m 29 30 A control switch left in an improper position on a prior maintenance visit prevented its emergency power supply from activating 30 Thunderstorms developing to the southwest later in the afternoon and evening produced additional tornadoes including the F3 tornado that struck Cedar Park and the F4 tornado that struck Lakeway 15 26 The Lakeway tornado was the first instance of an F4 tornado striking Travis County on record 5 The final tornado of the day touched down in Frio County and lifted at 7 23 p m 15 2 2 214 Farther south away from the southwestward moving storm cluster the cold front and dry line curved west making them parallel to the advancing gravity wave this triggered the development of numerous and intense storms between Austin and the Big Bend after 3 00 p m when the gravity wave intersected the front The parallel orientations of the wave and the other boundaries precluded these storms rotation 4 They tracked east and eventually merged with the southwestward propagating complex of tornadic storms along the Pedernales River This coalescence produced a south and southeastward moving squall line and ended the strong tornado activity Nonetheless strong and damaging winds were produced by the squall line for several hours Kelly Air Force Base in San Antonio documented a wind gust of 106 kn 122 mph 196 km h marking a record high wind velocity for the site 31 Warnings and preparedness editThe Storm Prediction Center SPC forecasted a moderate risk for severe thunderstorms over parts of East Texas in its severe weather outlook issued at 1 03 a m on May 27 The moderate risk region included Waco the Killeen Temple Fort Hood metropolitan area and extended east towards Shreveport Louisiana and Fort Polk Louisiana Austin was located at the boundary between the moderate risk region and the slight risk region that encompassed most of East and South Texas including the Hill Country The SPC predicted that the gravity wave would be a focal point for storms capable of producing large hail and damaging winds given the unstable atmosphere A subsequent outlook issued by the SPC at 10 16 a m continued to indicate a moderate risk for severe weather and mentioned the possibility of isolated and brief tornadoes 32 33 A tornado watch was later issued by the SPC at 12 54 p m for parts of eastern Texas and western Louisiana citing the unstable airmass in place over the region 28 The Dallas Fort Worth and Austin San Antonio National Weather Service forecast offices also issued bulletins on the morning of May 27 noting the potential for severe weather However these early outlooks focused more on the threat of wind and hail rather than tornadoes due to the low wind shear present over the region 34 The Dallas Fort Worth National Weather Service forecast office ultimately issued 10 tornado warnings and 5 severe thunderstorm warnings between 1 and 5 p m on May 27 The Austin San Antonio office issued 8 tornado warnings 24 severe thunderstorm warnings and 10 flash flood warnings during the afternoon and evening of May 27 with 80 percent of their issued products occurring after 5 p m in connection with the widespread storms that developed later in the day separate from the initial tornadic storms In one case a media outlet s decision to manually activate the Emergency Alert System rather than allow weather warnings to automatically trigger it resulted in a 25 30 minute delay in the dissemination of a warning 34 Interviews conducted by a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration service assessment team found that many watched the approach of tornadoes prior to taking shelter due to their slow movement and high visibility In the case of the F5 Jarrell tornado some fled while others took shelter Due to the strength of the tornado some who stayed behind were killed despite taking appropriate safety measures 35 Confirmed tornadoes editConfirmed tornadoes by Fujita rating FU F0 F1 F2 F3 F4 F5 Total0 6 6 3 3 1 1 20List of confirmed tornadoes Tuesday May 27 1997 g F Location County Start Coord Time UTC Path length Max width Damage c SummaryF2 W of Lorena McLennan 31 23 N 97 19 W 31 38 N 97 32 W 31 38 97 32 Lorena May 27 F2 18 21 18 33 2 mi 3 2 km 75 yd 69 m 75 000 Several large trees were uprooted and a mobile home was destroyed 36 F0 Eddy area McLennan 31 18 N 97 15 W 31 30 N 97 25 W 31 30 97 25 Eddy May 27 F0 18 44 18 47 0 2 mi 0 32 km 40 yd 37 m Tornado reported by a sheriff deputy caused no damage 37 F3 E of Moody McLennan Bell 31 16 N 97 21 W 31 27 N 97 35 W 31 27 97 35 Moody May 27 F3 18 46 18 59 3 7 mi 6 0 km 150 yd 140 m 150 000 Most of the tornado s path occurred in McLennan County A home and a barn were destroyed on Dowell Road after the tornado initially touched down in open terrain near Farm to Market Road 107 these structures received F3 tornado damage Another home nearby was also damaged and a pickup truck and car were displaced by several hundred feet The tornado moved south southwest crossing the border between McLennan and Bell counties and traversing open country There numerous trees were uprooted A local news station also captured this tornado and much of its life cycle as it passed within a few miles of their skycam and station 38 39 40 F0 WNW of Belton Bell 31 05 N 97 32 W 31 08 N 97 53 W 31 08 97 53 Belton May 27 F0 19 16 19 27 0 2 mi 0 32 km 50 yd 46 m Weak tornado remained stationary for much of its existence before dissipating 41 F3 N of Belton Bell 31 10 N 97 28 W 31 17 N 97 47 W 31 17 97 47 Belton May 27 F3 19 27 19 45 1 4 mi 2 3 km 275 yd 251 m 900 000 The tornado began on the northern shores of Lake Belton at Morgan s Point Resort A marina was destroyed on the lake s northern shores leading to the capsizing of 100 boats Ten homes along the same shore sustained severe damage and trees were destroyed The tornado then crossed the lake and moved ashore northeast of the community of Woodland downing many trees and causing heavy damage to at least six structures The tornado was on the ground for a third of a mile after traversing the lake before lifting 28 40 42 F1 SW of Belton Bell 31 01 N 97 32 W 31 02 N 97 53 W 31 02 97 53 Belton May 27 F1 19 50 19 58 0 2 mi 0 32 km 40 yd 37 m Brief tornado with unknown damage 43 F1 Blooming Grove area Navarro 32 06 N 96 43 W 32 10 N 96 72 W 32 10 96 72 Blooming Grove May 27 F1 20 05 20 10 0 5 mi 0 80 km 50 yd 46 m Brief tornado uprooted several large trees 43 F1 NW of Prairie Dell Bell 30 54 N 97 35 W 30 90 N 97 58 W 30 90 97 58 Prairie Dell May 27 F1 20 07 20 25 2 4 mi 3 9 km 100 yd 91 m 20 000 Initially stationary tornado that began to quickly track towards the south southwest destroying trees and damaging several structures 44 F2 N of Jarrell Williamson 30 53 05 N 97 35 38 W 30 8848 N 97 594 W 30 8848 97 594 Jarrell May 27 F2 20 25 20 33 2 mi 3 2 km 200 yd 180 m First of two tornadoes that preceded the Jarrell F5 tornado 45 F2 NW of Jarrell Williamson 30 52 05 N 97 36 11 W 30 868 N 97 603 W 30 868 97 603 Jarrell May 27 F2 20 35 20 39 0 5 mi 0 80 km 150 yd 140 m Second of two tornadoes that preceded the Jarrell F5 tornado classified as a multi vortex tornado 46 F1 S of Dawson Navarro 31 52 N 96 43 W 31 87 N 96 72 W 31 87 96 72 Dawson May 27 F1 20 36 20 40 0 5 mi 0 80 km 50 yd 46 m Brief tornado uprooted large trees 47 F5 W of Jarrell Williamson 30 50 24 N 97 37 05 W 30 84 N 97 618 W 30 84 97 618 Jarrell May 27 F5 20 40 20 53 5 1 mi 8 2 km 1 320 yd 1 210 m 40 1 million 27 deaths See section on this tornado 12 others were injured 48 F0 SW of Hubbard Hill 31 49 N 96 50 W 31 82 N 96 83 W 31 82 96 83 Hubbard May 27 F0 20 50 20 53 0 2 mi 0 32 km 40 yd 37 m Brief tornado caused no damage 49 F3 Cedar Park Williamson Travis 30 33 N 97 49 W 30 55 N 97 82 W 30 55 97 82 Cedar Park May 27 F3 21 05 21 15 9 2 mi 14 8 km 200 yd 180 m 70 11 million This tornado moved south through Cedar Park before crossing into Travis County and lifting just northeast of Mansfield Dam The thunderstorm that spawned the tornado developed along the flanking line of the storm that produced the F5 tornado in Jarrell It initially touched down in an open area causing minor shingle damage to a house and damaging a few trees Before moving into Cedar Park the tornado caused F1 and F2 damage Localized F3 damage occurred within Cedar Park s business district Most of the roofing on an Albertsons grocery store was torn away the store s walls and doors were also severely damaged or destroyed At least seven people were injured in the store and one person was hospitalized though additional injuries were mitigated by the sheltering of customers in the store s refrigeration units under the direction of the store s manager Several businesses were damaged along US 183 one business lost most of its roof though damage to most other businesses was minor A 65 000 pound 29 000 kg coal tender converted to hold diesel fuel was flipped over and thrown a short distance after a historic train was struck near the highway The tornado then moved into the Buttercup Creek subdivision in southwestern Cedar Park inflicting F1 F3 damage to 136 homes Some homes sustained significant roof loss and severe structural damage eleven were destroyed It then curved towards the southwest into Travis County and downed ten percent of trees in a wooded area before lifting 1 1 miles 1 8 km north of Lake Travis Fifteen people were injured by the tornado 40 50 51 52 53 54 F1 NW of Four Points Travis 30 24 N 97 51 W 30 40 N 97 85 W 30 40 97 85 Four Points May 27 F0 21 15 21 15 0 2 mi 0 32 km 20 yd 18 m 5 000 Brief tornado with minimal damage 55 F4 W of Lakeway Travis 30 22 N 98 01 W 30 37 N 98 02 W 30 37 98 02 Lakeway May 27 F4 21 50 5 6 mi 9 0 km 440 yd 400 m 15 million 1 death The tornado touched down near the shore of Lake Travis destroying a marina and most of the watercraft at the docks Trees in the area were contorted and uprooted though other nearby structure sustained minor damage of F0 severity Numerous structures sustained varying degrees of damage as the tornado moved westward and later southwestward including a Southwest Bell telephone building on Bee Creek Road that was destroyed and a home across the road that had several collapsed walls The destruction of the well constructed telephone building warranted an F4 rating The tornado then made a turn towards the southwest roughly 2 2 miles 3 5 km from Lake Travis bringing it across a hill where buildings and trees were destroyed Further southwest a steel tower carrying high transmission power lines was destroyed Additional site built homes mobile homes and other buildings were either heavily damaged or completely destroyed in the Hazy Hills subdivision leaving many uninhabitable This included well built homes within the subdivision One person was killed following the destruction of his mobile home and vehicle though investigators could not establish whether he was in the home or attempting to evacuate when the tornado struck The tornado crossed Texas State Highway 71 entering another subdivision near Lick Creek and causing as high as F2 tornado damage to structures in the area including the complete unroofing of one house near Pedernales Drive Throughout the tornado s path numerous trees were downed and 25 homes were destroyed five people were injured 40 56 57 F1 N of Kyle Hays 30 01 N 97 52 W 30 02 N 97 87 W 30 02 97 87 Kyle May 27 F1 22 38 22 45 3 5 mi 5 6 km 60 yd 55 m 5 000 Trees and power lines were knocked over 58 F0 S of Utopia Uvalde 29 31 N 99 32 W 29 52 N 99 53 W 29 52 99 53 Utopia May 27 F0 00 00 00 03 0 2 mi 0 32 km 20 yd 18 m Tornado remained over open country 59 F0 NW of Sisterdale Kendall 29 59 N 98 45 W 29 98 N 98 75 W 29 98 98 75 Sisterdale May 27 F0 00 30 00 32 0 7 mi 1 1 km 30 yd 27 m Tornado remained over open country 60 F0 NE of Moore Frio 29 04 N 99 00 W 29 07 N 99 00 W 29 07 99 00 Moore May 27 F0 01 20 01 23 1 mi 1 6 km 40 yd 37 m Tornado remained over open country 61 Jarrell Texas edit Jarrell tornadoF5 tornado nbsp View of the Jarrell tornado as it moved near the Double Creek Estates areaDuration13 minutesMax rating1F5 tornadoFatalities27 fatalities 12 injuriesDamage 40 1 million1Most severe tornado damage see Fujita scaleParts of Jarrell Texas were struck by an extremely powerful F5 tornado on the afternoon of May 27 5 29 The tornado destroyed approximately 10 percent of the homes in Jarrell 62 A1 at the time the city had a population of about 450 people and had been previously struck by tornadoes in 1987 and 1989 63 A1 64 A10 65 Hardest hit was the Double Creek Estates subdivision west of downtown Jarrell 15 6 66 A19 The 1997 Jarrell tornado was the first and only known occurrence of an F5 tornado in Williamson County 5 It was also the deadliest tornado in Texas since the 1987 Saragosa tornado 67 The thunderstorm that spawned the Jarrell tornado began west of Temple along the flanking line of another thunderstorm earlier in the afternoon of May 27 The storm produced several tornadoes in Bell County including the F3 tornado that impacted communities along Lake Belton 28 Weather radar observed a strengthening mesocyclone within the thunderstorm with the speed of rotation rising above 40 kn 46 mph 74 km h 29 As the storm moved into Williamson County it produced two short lived F2 tornadoes north of Jarrell at 3 25 p m and 3 35 p m the latter of the two was a multiple vortex tornado and lifted at 3 39 p m 45 46 15 5 The Austin San Antonio National Weather Service forecast office issued a tornado warning for Williamson County at 3 30 p m in response to the storm s approach the warning was put into effect for one hour This was the first tornado warning of the day issued for the office s warning area and warned that the city of Jarrell is in the path of this storm 68 Local warning sirens went off about 10 12 minutes before the tornado struck 69 The precise start of the Jarrell tornado was difficult to pinpoint 29 The most prominent and destructive part of the tornado s evolution was preceded by the apparition of short lived small and rope like funnel clouds These may have been separate tornadoes or simply an earlier part of the Jarrell tornado s evolution 40 C3 An aerial survey conducted by the Birmingham Alabama office of the National Weather Service included the damage caused by the earlier F2 tornadoes mostly to trees and roads as part of the overall Jarrell tornado path 40 C3 Some reports also include the F1 tornado near Prairie Dell as an earlier continuation of the Jarrell tornado 26 The final unambiguous apparition of the Jarrell tornado began as a narrow and rope shaped funnel when it touched down at 3 40 p m with witnesses and photo evidence showing that the tornado had the appearance of a dead man walking just within the Williamson County line 3 miles 4 8 km north of Jarrell 48 15 6 Like the two F3 tornadoes earlier in the day it developed along the gust front produced by its parent thunderstorm 26 This mechanism is typical of tornadogenesis not associated with supercell thunderstorms 70 Traffic along Interstate 35 came to a stop as the tornado descended nearby 62 A1 The Texas Highway Patrol also stopped traffic on both sides of the interstate under the expectation that the tornado would cross the highway it ultimately moved parallel to Interstate 35 71 Tracking south southwest 29 the tornado quickly intensified and grew to a 1 2 mile 0 80 km in width changing from its initial thin and white appearance to a blue and black color 15 6 62 A1 F5 tornado damage was identified early in the tornado s path 40 C3 Its intense winds scoured the ground and stripped pavement from roads 15 3 The tornado tore 525 feet 160 m of asphalt as it crossed County Roads 308 305 and 307 15 6 the thickness of the asphalt pavement was roughly 0 8 inches 20 mm 72 A culvert plant at the corner of Country Roads 305 and 307 collapsed Nearby a similar plant and a mobile home sustained some damage with the latter struck by a 2 4 piece of lumber The occupants of a mobile home 500 feet 150 m north northwest of the culvert plant fled to a frame house that the tornado later struck the evacuees were killed while the mobile home sustained only minor damage 73 63 A21 Some of the most extreme damage at this location was inflicted to a small metal framed recycling plant that was obliterated with little left of the structure besides a few twisted structural beams 74 nbsp The Double Creek Estates subdivision was pulverized by the tornado with many homes swept off their foundations and disintegrated This photograph shows one remaining foundation with plumbing pulled out of the concrete The tornado then slowly entered the Double Creek Estates subdivision where it exacted its most catastrophic impacts Concurrently the tornado expanded further to its maximum width of 3 4 mile 1 2 km 15 6 Eyewitnesses indicated that the tornado s movement slowed to around 5 10 mph 8 0 16 1 km h as it entered the neighborhood this may have contributed to the resulting extreme destruction 15 7 The tornado destroyed the first home it encountered at the northwestern corner of the subdivision a clock recovered from the remaining debris was stopped at 3 48 p m presumably marking the time the tornado entered the community 15 6 Much of the neighborhood was completely swept away with little debris remaining with what was left being reduced to small and unrecognizable fragments that were dispersed over a wide area The lack of large items that were recovered and the granularity of the debris was indicative of the sheer strength of the tornado 15 7 Due to the tornado s slow movement homes near the center of its path experienced tornadic winds for approximately three minutes 1 The mostly wooden framed residences some well built and anchored were completely obliterated and swept away leaving behind concrete slab foundations swept clean of all debris 73 2 6 In some cases parts of outbuilding and house foundations themselves in the subdivision were scoured away and several were found missing all of their sill plates that connected the wood frame homes to the foundations 75 76 Pieces of debris were found deposited in fields miles away from the subdivision and extreme ground scouring occurred reducing grassy fields into wide expanses of mud in the most severely affected areas 2 6 64 A10 77 In some cases the ground was scoured out to a depth of 18 inches 46 cm 19 Vehicles in the neighborhood were tossed and mangled beyond recognition at least six were found flattened in open areas and coated with mud and grass 15 7 2 5 Some were thrown as far as a 1 2 mile 0 80 km away and others were torn into multiple pieces of unrecognizable metal 78 Trees in the neighborhood were completely denuded and stripped entirely clean of all bark as well including one that was found with an electrical cord impaled through the trunk 15 7 2 5 79 All 27 fatalities associated with the Jarrell tornado occurred at Double Creek Estates 15 7 which at the time consisted of 131 residents living in 38 single family homes and several mobile homes 29 80 A20 Entire families were killed at Double Creek including all five members of the Igo Family all four members of the Moehring family and all three members of the Smith family 81 Bodily remains were later found at 30 locations and the physical trauma inflicted to some of the tornado victims was so extreme that first responders reportedly had difficulty distinguishing human remains from the remains of animals at the site 82 83 Most of the deaths were attributed in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report to multiple trauma though one death was attributed to asphyxia 3 The high intensity of the Jarrell tornado left those in its path with little recourse 84 most homes in Double Creek Estates were built on cement slab foundations and few had a basement or any form of storm shelter 2 6 nineteen people sought refuge in a single storm cellar 63 A21 Some residents who followed prescribed safety measures nonetheless perished 85 One survivor holed up in a bathtub and was flung several hundred feet from her house onto a road 63 A21 The walls of some homes along the periphery of the tornado path remained intact protecting some of those who survived the tornado 84 Others chose to evacuate ahead of the approaching tornado 85 Forty structures were obliterated in Double Creek Estates 15 7 Three businesses adjacent to Double Creek Estates were also destroyed 29 In total the tornado dealt 10 20 million in damage to the neighborhood 80 A20 Around 300 cattle grazing in a nearby pasture were killed and some were found 0 25 miles 0 40 km away 15 7 2 5 Hundreds of cattle were also dismembered and a few cows were also skinned by the tornado 78 66 A19 The tornado turned slightly towards the south southwest after traversing Double Creek Estates 15 7 The damage in these outlying areas was somewhat scattershot in one case a mobile home suffered only minor damage while an adjacent house lost half of its roof 86 Metal buildings were unroofed along County Road 305 south of Jarrell The road s guardrail was impaled by wooden planks thrown by the strong winds 62 A12 The tornado then again crossed County Road 305 and entered a forest of cedar trees 87 Some of the damage to the trees suggested that the tornado may have been a multiple vortex tornado which was documented by Scott Beckwith receiving a nickname as a dead man walking 88 89 Shortly after entering this forested area the path of damage left behind by the tornado ended abruptly with the National Centers for Environmental Information indicating that it lifted at 3 53 p m after remaining on the ground for 13 minutes and 5 1 miles 8 2 km 48 15 7 Other government accounts of the tornado list a total path length of 7 6 miles 12 2 km after incorporating the preceding tornadoes north of Jarrell and near Prairie Dell 29 40 C3 Between May 29 and June 1 the Office of the Federal Coordinator for Meteorological Services and Supporting Research carried out aerial and ground surveys of the tornadic damage in Texas in coordination with the Texas Wing Civil Air Patrol 90 The Jarrell tornado damage was classified as F5 severity throughout most of the tornado s path 40 C3 However a critique of the Fujita scale published by the National Institute of Standards and Technology suggested that winds between 158 206 mph 254 332 km h corresponding to an F3 rating on the scale were sufficient to explain the damage wrought by the Jarrell tornado h 92 The critique noted that some of the homes at Double Creek Estates although built within the preceding 15 years exhibited structural weaknesses in their design such as the lack of anchor bolts and steel straps in their foundations 76 Approximately 40 million in damage was inflicted upon property with another 100 000 inflicted upon crops Twelve people were injured by the storm in addition to the twenty seven killed 48 Due to the unusual southwestward motion of the thunderstorm that caused the tornado the sequence of weather events experienced by those affected was in the opposite order of typical tornadic events the tornado arrived first followed by the hail wind and rain of the parent thunderstorm 15 7 Despite the violence of the tornado and the presence of its associated mesocyclone aloft the thunderstorm did not exhibit a distinct hook echo on weather radar typically associated with such tornadoes This may have also been caused by the unusual southwestward motion of the thunderstorm resulting in the tornado s placement in an atypical position relative to the thunderstorm s motion 29 Non tornadic effects editIn addition to the tornadoes there were 12 reports of large hail in Central Texas received by the National Weather Service during the late afternoon and evening 5 The largest hail measuring nearly 4 in 100 mm in diameter was recorded in Cedar Park in conjunction with the F3 tornado that hit the city Damaging hail was also reported in Georgetown beginning at 3 55 p m Severe thunderstorms also generated damaging straight line winds across the Hill Country and South Central Texas 15 3 Much of these winds were associated with the eventual non tornadic line of storms that resulted from the coalescence of the day s earlier storms 31 Wind gusts ranging between 58 71 mph 93 114 km h were recorded in Austin with the peak 71 mph 114 km h wind gust occurring at Robert Mueller Municipal Airport at 4 20 p m 15 3 There were also unofficial reports of winds reaching as high as 90 mph 140 km h to the west of Austin near Lake Travis 93 Kelly Air Force Base in San Antonio registered a gust of 122 mph 196 km h at 8 03 p m Gusts reached 61 mph 98 km h in Del Rio and overturned a plane at an airport near Seguin 15 3 The storms knocked out power to 60 000 electricity customers in Austin and as many as 21 000 electricity customers serviced by Texas Utilities 62 A10 Telephone service for more than 3 000 residents in the Pedernales Valley was disrupted 57 A11 The thunderstorms also produced heavy rain that triggered floods in Blanco Gonzales Karnes and Travis counties 15 3 An official rainfall total of 1 44 in 37 mm was documented in Austin though 2 5 in 64 mm of rain fell in nearby Round Rock The rains caused Brushy Creek to flood beyond its banks as far east as Thorndale 93 One person drowned in floodwaters along Shoal Creek in Austin 5 Another person died in Cedar Park of cardiac arrest likely induced by storm related stress 3 The Southwestern Insurance Information Service estimated that the totality of the storms effects inflicted 25 40 million in insured losses most insured claims originated from Cedar Park 94 Aftermath edit nbsp The memorial at Jarrell Memorial Park naming the victims of the 1989 and 1997 Jarrell tornadoesLaw enforcement officers from the Texas Department of Public Safety four municipal police departments and two county sheriff s offices aided search and rescue efforts in the aftermath of the Jarrell tornado 64 A10 The Texas National Guard and other volunteers from around Central Texas joined in the search 75 63 A21 The Scott amp White Blood Center facilitated blood donations 63 A21 A temporary shelter was established by the American Red Cross at Jarrell High School for those displaced by the tornado 64 A10 providing food and accepting clothes donations 63 A21 The agency s relief operations covering residents of 211 homes cost an estimated 250 000 community donations covered at least 200 000 of the expenses 95 The Jarrell Volunteer Fire Department organized a temporary morgue 64 A10 the deceased were later brought to the Travis County Forensic Center for identification 82 Although a death toll of 30 people was initially reported that figure was later revised to 27 the inflated count was attributed to the dispersion of remains that led some fatalities to be tallied twice 63 A21 Carcasses of livestock were buried at Double Creek Estates Texas Governor George W Bush declared Williamson County a disaster area Bush visited Jarrell on May 28 and described the tornadic damage as the worst he had ever witnessed 63 A21 U S Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison also visited Jarrell and Cedar Park 52 Bush later requested federal aid for Williamson and Bell counties with support from Hutchinson 96 The Federal Emergency Management Agency elected not to provide federal aid citing the contributions from private and state sources 97 A8 Instead the Small Business Administration and U S Department of Agriculture made available loans for the rebuilding of homes farms and ranches 97 The U S Congress approved a relief bill allocating 5 4 billion for 35 states affected by natural disasters including Texas However the bill also included other provisions that led President Bill Clinton to veto the bill 98 A drive through donation line was established at Auditorium Shores in Austin 99 A1 Local musicians organized and performed at a benefit concert at Austin Music Hall attracting an audience of 2 800 and raising about 94 000 100 101 Businesses also donated to the relief efforts 99 A7 First responders representing Cedar Park Austin Leander Round Rock and Williamson and Travis counties arrived in Cear Park shortly after the city was hit by a tornado Texas A amp M University supplied equipment for search and rescue operations in the aftermath of the Cedar Park tornado 62 A10 These operations were the first test of the 186 member Texas Urban Search and Rescue Team which was created following the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing 102 Vouchers were distributed by the American Red Cross to storm victims in the Buttercup Creek subdivision for clothing food and other supplies 52 Texas State Troopers blocked areas of Buttercup Creek to prevent looting 62 A10 A memorial was erected in downtown Jarrell bearing the names of the 27 people killed by the Jarrell tornado The Jarrell Memorial Park was established near Double Creek Estates on the land of the former Igo family who perished in the tornado The park contains 27 trees planted in honor of the victims In 2019 the memorial was relocated to the park along with the city s historical marker 103 104 The events and survivor accounts of the tornado were profiled in television documentaries such as the 1999 episode of HBO s America Undercover series titled Fatal Twisters A Season of Fury 105 106 the 1999 BBC television series titled Twister Week also known as Tornado Diary in the United States in an episode titled Tornado Alley 107 the seventh episode of the Discovery Channel program Storm Warning produced by GRB Entertainment 108 and the 2006 documentary Ultimate Disaster also known as Mega Disaster on National Geographic Channel 109 See also edit nbsp Weather portalList of North American tornadoes and tornado outbreaks 1922 Austin twin tornadoes also featured southwestward tracking tornadoes that struck the Austin Texas area Tornado outbreak of April 6 9 1998 produced the official first F5 tornado after the Jarrell tornado 1953 Waco tornado the deadliest tornado in Texas historyNotes edit a b c All times in Central Daylight Time UTC 5 00 unless otherwise noted The Jarrell tornado was rated as an F5 tornado on the Fujita scale corresponding to peak gusts of 261 318 mph 420 512 km h These winds were estimated from the damage and not directly measured 1 a b All damage totals are in 1997 USD unless otherwise noted The divergence of air at the upper levels of the troposphere promotes upward motion and aids thunderstorm development 7 Wind shear a change of wind velocities with height is necessary to produce rotating thunderstorms making it a key physical condition for the development of tornadoes 8 9 Environments with thunderstorms often exhibit CAPE exceeding 1 000 J kg with extreme cases exhibiting CAPE greater than 5 000 J kg 12 All dates are based on Central Daylight Time UTC 05 00 however all times are in Coordinated Universal Time for consistency These winds would correspond to an EF3 EF5 tornado on the modern Enhanced Fujita Scale 91 The critique noted that the winds corresponding to an F3 tornado in the Fujita scale would completely destroy most homes References edit a b Henson Bob May 26 2016 Twenty Years On A Look Back at the Jarrell Tornado Catastrophe Weather Underground TWC Product and Technology Retrieved April 10 2021 a b c d e f g h Storm Data PDF Storm Data 39 5 Asheville North Carolina National Climatic Data Center May 1997 ISSN 0039 1972 Retrieved April 7 2021 via National Centers for Environmental Information permanent dead link a b c Paz Enrique Kolavic Shellie Zane David November 14 1997 Tornado Disaster Texas May 1997 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 46 45 Centers for Disease Control Retrieved April 10 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Corfidi Stephen F July 1998 Some Thoughts On the Role Mesoscale Features Played in the 27 May 1997 Central Texas Tornado Outbreak 19th Severe Local Storms Conference Minneapolis Minnesota Storm Prediction Center Retrieved April 7 2021 a b c d e f Henderson et al 1998 p 1 Morgan et al 1998 p 4 Divergence National Weather Service Glossary National Weather Service Retrieved April 7 2021 Mapping May s Tornado Outbreak Ingredients for the Perfect Storm National Environmental Satellite Data and Information Service June 20 2019 Archived from the original on April 10 2021 Retrieved April 6 2021 Tornadoes Nature s Most Violent Storms About Tornadoes Peachtree City Georgia National Weather Service Retrieved April 6 2021 a b c Morgan et al 1998 p 3 a b Morgan et al 1998 p 1 a b Henderson et al 1998 p 2 Houston and Wilhelmson 2007a p 724 Houston and Wilhelmson 2007a p 702 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y May 1997 Tornado Outbreak PDF New Braunfels Texas National Weather Service May 2017 Retrieved April 7 2021 Houston and Wilhelmson 2007a pp 704 711 Houston and Wilhelmson 2007a p 701 Houston and Wilhelmson 2007a p 723 a b Toohey Marty September 25 2018 Power and devastation of the Jarrell tornado by the numbers Austin American Statesman Austin Texas Gannett Retrieved April 10 2021 Houston and Wilhelmson 2007a pp 724 725 Morgan et al 1998 p 14 Davies Jonathan M August 16 2002 Significant Tornadoes in Environments with Relatively Weak Shear PDF 21st Conference on Severe Local Storms American Meteorological Society Retrieved April 7 2021 Morgan et al 1998 pp 4 5 a b Houston and Wilhelmson 2007a p 715 Houston and Wilhelmson 2007a p 713 a b c d e Houston and Wilhelmson 2007b p 729 Houston and Wilhelmson 2007b p 730 a b c d e The Tornadoes of May 27 1997 Jarrell Tornado Anniversary Fort Worth Texas National Weather Service Fort Worth Dallas TX Retrieved April 7 2021 a b c d e f g h i Henderson et al 1998 p 3 a b Henderson et al 1998 p 15 a b Morgan et al 1998 pp 12 13 Henderson et al 1998 p 5 SPC Day 1 Convective Outlook Issued at 0603Z May 27 1997 Norman Oklahoma Storm Prediction Center May 27 1997 Retrieved April 7 2021 via Cooperative Institute for Meteorological Satellite Studies a b Henderson et al 1998 pp 5 10 Henderson et al 1998 pp 11 12 Texas Event Report F0 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 Texas Event Report F0 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 Texas Event Report F3 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 Texas Event Report F3 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 a b c d e f g h i Peters Brian E 1998 Aerial Damage Survey of the Central Texas Tornadoes of May 27 1997 PDF National Weather Service Retrieved April 7 2021 Texas Event Report F0 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 Texas Event Report F3 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 a b Texas Event Report F1 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 Texas Event Report F1 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 a b Texas Event Report F2 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 a b Texas Event Report F2 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 Texas Event Report F1 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 a b c d Texas Event Report F5 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 Texas Event Report F0 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 Texas Event Report F3 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 Texas Event Report F3 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 a b c Dworin Diana Easterly Greg May 30 1997 Cedar Park residents ready to rebuild Austin American Statesman Austin Texas pp A8 Retrieved April 10 2021 via Newspapers com Henderson et al 1998 p 4 Dworin Diana May 29 1997 Tornado s oddities emerge in the rubble Austin American Statesman Austin Texas Retrieved April 10 2021 via Newspapers com Texas Event Report F1 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 Texas Event Report F4 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 a b Jayson Sharon May 31 1997 In Pedernales Valley tragedy is smaller but equally felt Austin American Statesman Austin Texas pp A1 A11 Retrieved April 10 2021 via Newspapers com p A1 p A11 Texas Event Report F1 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 Texas Event Report F0 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 Texas Event Report F0 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 Texas Event Report F0 Tornado Storm Events Database Report National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved April 7 2021 a b c d e f g Harmon Dave May 28 1997 Like a war zone Austin American Statesman Austin Texas pp A1 A12 Retrieved April 8 2021 via Newspapers com p A1 p A12 a b c d e f g h i Beach Patrick May 29 1997 Jarrell s toll 27 23 still missing Austin American Statesman Austin Texas pp A1 A21 Retrieved April 10 2021 p A1 p A21 a b c d e Osborn Claire Easterly Greg Ward Pamela May 28 1997 Nearly destroyed in 89 Jarrell is slammed again Austin American Statesman Austin Texas pp A1 A10 Retrieved April 8 2021 via Newspapers com p A1 p A10 Monroe Nichole May 28 1997 1989 tornado punished Jarrell with fatal force Austin American Statesman Austin Texas p A10 Retrieved April 8 2021 via Newspapers com a b Kelso John May 29 1997 Upheaval roars after winds leave Austin American Statesman pp A1 A19 Retrieved April 10 2021 via Newspapers com p A1 p A19 Tornadoes kill 30 in Central Texas El Paso Times El Paso Texas Associated Press May 28 1997 p 1A Retrieved April 8 2021 via Newspapers com Henderson et al 1998 p A9 Stanley Dick May 29 1997 Storm s fury overwhelmed warnings Austin American Statesman Austin Texas p A18 Retrieved April 10 2021 via Newspapers com Houston and Wilhelmson 2007b p 1 Miller Daniel J Doswell Charles A III Brooks Harold E Stumpf Gregory J Rasmussen Erik Highway Overpasses as Tornado Shelters Fallout From the 3 May 1999 Oklahoma Kansas Violent Tornado Outbreak Norman Oklahoma National Weather Service Norman OK p 17 Archived from the original on April 10 2021 Retrieved April 10 2021 Phan and Simiu 1998 p 8 a b Phan and Simiu 1998 p 9 Schuman Shawn November 23 2023 May 27 1997 The Jarrell Texas Tornado stormstalker wordpress com Wordpress Retrieved April 6 2023 a b Verhovek Sam Howe May 29 1997 Little Is Left in Wake of Savage Tornado The New York Times New York p A1 Retrieved April 10 2021 a b Phan and Simiu 1998 p 12 Schuman Shawn November 23 2023 May 27 1997 The Jarrell Texas Tornado stormstalker wordpress com Wordpress Retrieved April 6 2023 a b The Jarrell TX Tornado of 27 May 97 Norman Oklahoma Storm Prediction Center Archived from the original on April 10 2021 Retrieved April 10 2021 Schuman Shawn November 23 2023 May 27 1997 The Jarrell Texas Tornado stormstalker wordpress com Wordpress Retrieved April 6 2023 a b Beach Patrick June 1 1997 Their roots held Austin American Statesman Austin Texas pp A1 A20 A21 Retrieved April 10 2021 via Newspapers com p A1 p A20 p A21 Rucker Hanna May 25 2022 Three families killed in the 1997 Jarrell tornado are buried together in Georgetown kvue com KVUE Retrieved April 6 2023 a b Todd Mike May 29 1997 In hunt for bodies official finds nature s brutality Austin American Statesman Austin Texas p A18 Retrieved April 10 2021 via Newspapers com Schuman Shawn November 23 2023 May 27 1997 The Jarrell Texas Tornado stormstalker wordpress com Wordpress Retrieved April 6 2023 a b Henderson et al 1998 p 12 a b Henderson et al 1998 p 11 Phan and Simiu 1998 p 13 NWS Austin San Antonio TX NWS Fort Worth Dallas TX May 19 2022 May 27 1997 Central Texas Tornado Outbreak ArcGIS StoryMaps Retrieved September 4 2022 The TIME Vault June 9 1997 TIME com Retrieved June 29 2023 Edge The Professor On June 14 2020 A preview of Meteorology and Myth Part VII The Dead Man Walking From Equatorial Icecaps to Polar Deserts Retrieved June 29 2023 Phan and Simiu 1998 p 2 Enhanced F Scale for Tornado Damage Norman Oklahoma Storm Prediction Center Retrieved April 10 2021 Phan and Simiu 1998 p 16 a b Stanley Dick May 28 1997 Cool air hot air don t mix quietly Austin American Statesman Austin Texas p A13 Retrieved April 8 2021 via Newspapers com Insurers lower storm estimate by 60 million Austin American Statesman Austin Texas May 31 1997 p A11 Retrieved April 10 2021 via Newspapers com Moscoso Eunice May 31 1997 Donations covering Red Cross costs Austin American Statesman Austin Texas p A10 Retrieved April 10 2021 via Newspapers com Easterly Greg May 31 1997 Federal aid is requested for residents Austin American Statesman Austin Texas p A12 Retrieved April 10 2021 via Newspapers com a b Rivera Dylan June 7 1997 Jarrell won t get federal relief Austin American Statesman Austin Texas pp A1 A8 Retrieved April 10 2021 via Newspapers com p A1 p A8 Congress sends disaster bill toward likely veto by Clinton Austin American Statesman Austin Texas June 6 1997 p A2 Retrieved April 10 2021 via Newspapers com a b Hopper Leigh May 30 1997 A torn town finds it has thousands of giving neighbors Austin American Statesman Austin Texas pp A1 A7 Retrieved April 10 2021 via Newspapers com p A1 Riemenschneider Chris June 6 1997 Benefit raises 94 000 for victims Austin American Statesman Austin Texas p B1 Retrieved April 10 2021 via Newspapers com Riemenschneider Chris May 31 1997 Texas bands will play Tornado Jam benefit Austin American Statesman Austin Texas p A11 Retrieved April 10 2021 via Newspapers com Trower Tara Lindell Chuck May 29 1997 Search continues at Albertson s Austin American Statesman Austin Texas p A20 Retrieved April 10 2021 via Newspapers com Historical Marker Jarrell Williamson County Historical Commission Retrieved April 10 2021 Windler Chikage May 26 2017 Jarrell marks 20 years since tornado that killed 27 CBS Austin Austin Texas Retrieved April 10 2021 FATAL TWISTERS ISN T ABOUT STORMS IT S ABOUT PAIN Orlando Sentinel July 11 1999 Retrieved September 28 2021 Fatal Twisters A Season of Fury America Undercover July 12 1999 HBO Archived from the original on November 14 2021 Retrieved September 28 2021 via YouTube Tornado Alley Twister Week 1999 BBC One Archived from the original on November 14 2021 Retrieved September 28 2021 Storm Warning Episode 7 Jarrell Texas Twister Ice Queen Brazil Flood GRB Entertainment 1997 Archived from the original on November 14 2021 Retrieved January 8 2021 via YouTube Mega Disaster Tornado Natural History New Zealand National Geographic Channel 2006 Archived from the original on November 14 2021 Retrieved January 8 2021 via YouTube Bibliography editHenderson James H Hakkarinen Ida M Lerner William H McLaughlin Melvin R Looney James M McIntyre E L Peters Brian E Trainor Marilu Paz Enrique Kolavic Shellie Ann Zane David Phan Long T April 1998 The Central Texas Tornadoes of May 27 1997 PDF Service Assessment Silver Spring Maryland National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved April 7 2021 Houston Adam L Wilhelmson Robert B March 1 2007 Observational Analysis of the 27 May 1997 Central Texas Tornadic Event Part I Prestorm Environment and Storm Maintenance Propagation Monthly Weather Review 135 3 American Meteorological Society 701 726 Bibcode 2007MWRv 135 701H doi 10 1175 MWR3300 1 Houston Adam L Wilhelmson Robert B March 1 2007 Observational Analysis of the 27 May 1997 Central Texas Tornadic Event Part II Tornadoes Monthly Weather Review 135 3 American Meteorological Society 727 735 Bibcode 2007MWRv 135 727H doi 10 1175 MWR3301 1 Morgan Carl Orrock Jeff Rydell Nezette Ward Jimmy July 1998 A Meteorological and Radar Analysis of the Central Texas Tornado Outbreak on May 27 1997 PDF New Braunfels Texas National Weather Service Retrieved April 6 2021 via NOAA Institutional Repository Phan Long T Simiu Emil July 1998 The Fujita Tornado Intensity Scale A Critique Based on Observations of the Jarrell Tornado of May 27 1997 PDF Gaithersburg Maryland National Institute of Standards and Technology Retrieved April 7 2021 External links editAerial Damage Survey of the Central Texas Tornadoes of May 27 1997 PDF National Weather Service includes discussion and map of the tornado s track Texas Tornadoes National Climatic Data Center Satellite imagery University of Wisconsin Madison Stormtrack Magazine Nov Dec 1997 Jarrell Texas Tornado Expanded Edition PDF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1997 Central Texas tornado outbreak amp oldid 1218116751, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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