Storm Trackers Examining Deadly Paths
Monday's tornado outbreak began so quickly and was so long-lasting that National Weather Service meteorologists, still tracking developing violent weather, were unable to give an exact count of the twisters that had hit the state.
As tornadoes continued to form, meteorologist Bruce Thoren said weather service officials would not be able to get a clear count of the tornadoes until after they had viewed the storms' damage paths.
The weather service had known by midafternoon that conditions were ripe for violent weather, Thoren said.
"It seems like almost everything that formed got going really well today," he said. "Almost everything that went up ended up being a supercell."
Supercells are large, powerful thunderstorms with a rotating updraft, a key ingredient for tornado formation.
The most violent of the storms began taking on tornadic aspects in
Lawton, tracking near Lake Ells
"That's when we knew there were
serious problems," Thoren said.
That storm moved into the Oklahoma City metro area, flattening
homes, scattering and smashing cars
in south Oklahoma City, Moore and
Midwest City.
Jim Purpura, warning coordination meteorologist for the National
Weather Service, said the first tornado warning was issued about 4:45
p.m. for Comanche, Caddo and Grady
counties. There were more than three
storm paths along which tornado
damage was intermittent.
The first path started around Fort
Sill and moved from Lawton up
through the Oklahoma City area into
Lincoln County, producing three to
five tornadoes.
Another path still being tracked
about 10:15 p.m. was near Geary in
Blaine County to north and east of
Dover in Kingfisher County.
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