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Severe Weather and Flash Flooding Threat Continues in the Central and Southern Plains; Heavy Mountain Snow in the Intermountain West

Heavy rain and severe weather will continue across the central and southern Plains through the weekend. Tornadoes, large hail, damaging winds and flash flooding will be the primary threats. Heavy mountain snow will push into the Intermountain West and portions of the central Rockies. Snow will linger into Monday across the central and southern Rockies. Read More >

Overview Severe Weather on August 9th, 2020

Severe thunderstorms moved through the western and central Upper Peninsula bringing wind damage to parts of Iron and Marquette counties.  A tornado touched down near Peavy Pond bringing down many large healthy trees. 

Torrential rainfall was also observed with thunderstorm activity. The highest rainfall totals of 3 to 4 inches were estimated and observed across northern Houghton County, along the higher terrain mostly between Lake Roland and South Range. A few isolated areas of flash flooding were reported as a result.

*This page will be updated to include additional information including radar images,  atmospheric environment and storm reports. 

Click here to see a summary of storm reports from this event.


 

Large tree uprooted near Golden Lake
Power Pole Snapped at Golden Lake
Power Pole snapped at Golden Lake Large uprooted tree at Golden Lake Multiple trees uprooted and snapped along Peavy Pond Rd

Tornado Near Brule River at M-189

Tornado - Brule River and M-189
IRON COUNTY

Date Sunday, August 9th
Time (Local) 9:12 pm CDT
EF Rating EF1
Est. Peak Winds 105 mph
Path Length 4.6 miles
Max Width 250 yards
Injuries/Deaths 0

Summary: A second tornado was confirmed to have touched down in extreme northeast Forest County, east of the town of Alvin, WI.  It tracked across the Brule River into the Upper Peninsula of Michigan near M-189. Trees were uprooted and snapped, no structures were damaged.

Track Map

 

 

 

 

Damage Pictures
Photo Photo Photo Photo
Large uprooted tree Many trees snapped and uprooted trees Several snapped pines Large pine tree snapped

 


The Enhanced Fujita (EF) Scale classifies tornadoes into the following categories:

EF0
Weak

65-85 mph
EF1
Moderate
86-110 mph
EF2
Significant
111-135 mph
EF3
Severe
136-165 mph
EF4
Extreme
166-200 mph
EF5
Catastrophic
200+ mph
ef-scale

 

 

 

 


Damaging Winds Near Golden Lake

Across western Iron County, estimated 80 mph straight-line damaging winds uprooted and snapped hundreds of healthy hardwood and softwood trees on both side of the Golden Lake, impacting the Golden Lakes Campground as well. Additional tree damage and snapped power lines were sporadically reported across Iron and Marquette counties as convection congealed into a bowing segment that pushed northeast across central Upper Michigan late Sunday evening.  

 

Date Sunday, August 9th
Time (Local) 841 pm to 854 pm CDT
Est. Peak Winds 80 mph

Summary:

An area of damaging straight line winds snapped and uprooted hundreds of trees around Golden Lake.  The path of wind damage appears to be about 9 miles long, initiating near the southwest side of Golden Lake.

Photo Photo Photo Photo
Large uprooted trees Several trees on home Large tree trunk snapped Several trees broken or uprooted on home owner's property
Photo Photo Photo Photo
Downed trees blocking Golden Lake Trail Tree trunk snapped and twisted at the base Numerous trees snapped on a home owner's property Another large uprooted tree

Radar Images

From top left to bottom right: Reflectivity (Z), Base Velocity (BV), Correlation Coefficient (CC), and Differential Reflectivity (ZDR). The red marker indicates the location of Golden Lake.

In this case, the BV "couplet" of inbound (green) and outbound (red) velocities is more broad. This radar scan is the closest to the ground available, which is at about 5500 feet above ground. At 8:42 PM, the radar detected inbound velocities of 95 knots (109 mph) at this elevation over Golden Lake. However, not all of that wind reaches the ground. Velocity estimates on radar are almost always higher than what is observed at the ground. The number of trees that were snapped and uprooted in this area suggests that the maximum wind at the ground was about 80 mph.

Photo Photo Photo Photo
8:41 PM CDT 8:42 PM CDT 8:44 PM CDT 8:45 PM CDT

Other Wind Damage and Flooding

Damage Pictures

Outside of Iron County, wind damage was much more sporadic. Minor to locally moderate tree damage was observed in Marquette County and southern Houghton County. Heavy rain led to minor flooding and partial road washouts in northern Houghton County, near Twin Lakes and Chassell.


Damage Pictures

Photo Photo Photo Photo
Tree down on power lines in Sidnaw, courtesy of Mary Ellen Bowers Trees uprooted in Champion, courtesy of Amy Richards Trees snapped in Clarksburg Road washed out in Chassell, courtesy of Ashton Brooke
 

Radar & Environment

This section will continue to be updated!

Environment
Radar loop showing the evolution of convection across the Keweenaw, followed by the main line of convection that bowed out as it moved across central Upper Michigan Sunday night. Precipitation totals were highest over the west and up the spine of the Keweenaw, where storms lingered and trained over the same area compared to the rest of Upper Michigan where storms remained more progressive.
Photo Photo Photo Photo
300 mb Height and Wind at 10 pm EDT Aug 9 500 mb Height and Vorticity at 10 pm EDT Aug 9 700 mb Height and Relative Humidity at 10 pm EDT Aug 9 850 mb Height and Temperature at 10 pm EDT Aug 9
Photo Photo Photo Photo
850 mb Height and Wind at 10 pm EDT Aug 9 Mean Sea Level Pressure and Surface Dew Point at 10 pm EDT Aug 9 700-500 mb Lapse Rates at 10 pm EDT Aug 9 Surface-based CAPE and 0-3 km Storm Relative Helicity at 10 pm EDT Aug 9
Photo Photo Photo Photo
Vertical profile near Peavy Falls at 8 pm EDT Aug 9 Vertical profile near Peavy Falls at 9 pm EDT Aug 9 Vertical profile near Peavy Falls at 10 pm EDT Aug 9 Vertical profile near Peavy Falls at 11 pm EDT Aug 9
 
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