Wikipedia : Veterans Day Weekend tornado outbreak of 2002
While November tornadoes in Ohio are rare, November has historically been known for its volatile weather in the Great Lakes Region. Like March or April, the weather in November can change drastically. Here's a Nov 23, 2002 Toledo Blade story titled Surprise snow closes schools.
I remember Nov 10, 2002 being unseasonably warm and windy. After the storms, didn't people in the Toledo area find items, such as mail that blew in from the Van Wert area?
Midwestern Regional Climate Center : Severe Weather Outbreak - November 10, 2002
Toledo Blade Nov 11, 2002 : Killer twisters strike
Toledo Blade Nov 11, 2002 : Swift evacuation of Van Wert theater prevents additional deaths in county
Toledo Blade Nov 16, 2002 : Many pets missing, orphaned in aftermath of tornadoes
Toledo Blade Nov 9, 2003 : Victims rebuild lives after killer twisters
Wunderground : Nov 10, 2002 weather at Toledo Metcalf Airport - High Temp = 66
Fujita Scale "is a scale for rating tornado intensity, based on the damage tornadoes inflict on human-built structures and vegetation."
YouTube : In-car video of the Van Wert F4 tornado from the Ohio State Highway Patrol
YouTube : Another video of the Van Wert tornado
YouTube : Van Wert tornado
YouTube : Van Wert tornado
NOAA : Van Wert tornado damage
Geocities : Van Wert tornado damage
Google Image Search : Van Wert tornado
Toledo Blade photo of what I think is the Tiffin tornado.
20 tornado touchdowns were recorded in Ohio on Nov 10, 2002. Locally :
| Intensity | Location | County | Time | Path Length | Damage | |
| F1 | E of Cygnet | Wood | 4:54 pm | 4.5 miles | ||
| F2 | N of Fostoria | Hancock, Seneca | 4:57 pm | 9 miles | ||
| F0 | SE of Perrysburg | Wood | 5:10 pm | 0.1 mile | ||
| F3 | SE of Tiffin | Seneca | 5:15 pm | 21 miles | 1 death | |
| F1 | NW of Millbury | Wood | 5:19 pm | 0.5 mile | ||
| F1 | Fremont | Sandusky | 5:20 pm | 3.5 miles | ||
| F2 | Port Clinton | Ottawa | 5:30 pm | 10 miles | ||
| F1 | W of Norwalk | Huron | 5:42 pm | 7.5 miles | ||
University of Illinois : Veteran's Day Lake Effect Snow Storm of November 9-14, 1996 :
Weather Almanac : Lake Effect Snow Storm Named 'Chestnut'
NOAA : Hell Hath' No Fury Like a Great Lakes Fall Storm :
USA Today : 'November Witches' batter Great Lakes
Weather Almanac : The Winds of November
Many great storms have been borne over the Lakes during November of the Mothers Superior, Michigan, and Huron, and their toll on Great Lakes shipping has long been the subject of story and song. In his classic ballad, The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald, folksinger Gordon Lightfoot sang of the "bones to be chewed when the gales of November blow early." At least 25 killer storms have greeted November sailors on the five Lakes since 1847. The storms of November have brought death to more sailors on the Great Lakes than any other agent.
The Great Lakes play a major role in determining the climate and weather of their region. The reason for their large influence lies in their waters. Water, you see, gains or losses heat much slower than air or land surfaces. Thus, the large volumes of water in the Great Lakes cool so slowly that the water temperatures of all the Great Lakes are out of step with the seasons by several months.
As autumn progresses, the lake waters still retain much of their summer warmth. When the first cold, northern air masses move out of the arctic and across the Lakes, they are warmed by the waters below. This added heat tempers the arctic outbreak thus postponing the first frosts along the southern and eastern lake shores by several weeks. The fruit belts of Ontario, Michigan and upper New York State are made possible by this moderating influence on autumnal cold air outbreaks.
But by late September, the contrast between the cold, dry air moving down from the Canadian North and the warm, moist air flowing up from the Gulf of Mexico can cause great storm systems to form along the polar front. These storms move along several storm tracks of which two cross the Great Lakes basin in November. As these storms move across the Lakes, they receive heat energy from the warm waters below, which provides additional fuel to run the storm engine.
When a developed or developing storm system moves across the relatively warm waters, it can intensify with explosive speed. The resulting storms produce hurricane-force winds reaching 160 km/h (100 mph), large waves that at times exceed 15 m (50 ft) in height, and heavy precipitation over the water and along the shoreline. A few of these storms stall over the Great Lakes basin, voraciously feeding and growing on the warm-water energy below them. While spinning in place, such storms may ravage the Lakes and surrounding shoreline for days.
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current date: 08-Jan-2009 1:14 A.M.