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Agenda - Council - 12/10/2019
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Agenda - Council - 12/10/2019
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Meetings
Meeting Document Type
Agenda
Meeting Type
Council
Document Date
12/10/2019
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Anoka County <br />MINNESOTA <br />Respectful, Innovative, Fiscally Responsible <br />Thunderstorms may occur singly, in clusters, or in <br />lines. Some of the most severe weather occurs <br />when a single thunderstorm affects one location for <br />an extended time. <br />Straight-line winds can exceed 100 miles per hour <br />and are responsible for most thunderstorm damage. <br />One type of straight-line wind, the downburst, can <br />cause damage equivalent to a tornado. <br />Thunderstorms are associated with tornadoes and <br />heavy rains that lead to floods. <br />All thunderstorms contain lightning, which is an <br />electrical discharge that results from the buildup of positive and negative charges. When the <br />buildup becomes strong enough, lightning appears as a "bolt." This flash of light usually occurs <br />within the clouds or between the clouds and the ground. A bolt of lightning reaches a <br />temperature approaching 50,000° F in a split second. In the United States, 27 citizens are killed <br />each year by lightning on average. Lightning's electrical charge and intense heat electrocutes <br />on contact, splits trees and ignites fires. <br />Anoka County 2019 <br />Multi -Jurisdictional <br />All Hazards Mitigation Plan <br />Hail is produced by many strong thunderstorms and is a product of the updrafts and downdrafts <br />that develop inside the clouds of a thunderstorm where super cooled water droplets exist. The <br />transformation of droplets to ice requires a temperature below 32° F, and a catalyst in the form <br />of tiny particles of solid matter, or freezing nuclei. Hail can be smaller than a pea or as large as <br />softballs and can be destructive to property, crops, livestock, and people. <br />4.2.1.9 Severe Weather - Tornados <br />Tornados are violent windstorms characterized by a <br />twisting, funnel -shaped cloud. A tornado is spawned by <br />a thunderstorm or hurricane and produced when cool air <br />overrides a layer of warm air, forcing the warm air to rise <br />rapidly. A funnel does not need to reach to the ground <br />for a tornado to be present. A debris cloud beneath a <br />thunderstorm is all that is needed to confirm the <br />presence of a tornado. The damage from a tornado is a <br />result of the high wind velocity and wind-blown debris. <br />Tornados can occur at any time of the year; however, <br />the season is generally March through August. Over <br />80% of all tornadoes strike between noon and midnight. <br />The most violent tornadoes are capable of tremendous <br />destruction with wind speeds of 250 mph or more. <br />Damage paths can be in excess of 1 mile wide and 50 miles long. Even with advances in <br />meteorology, adequate warning time for tornadoes is short or sometimes not possible. <br />The intensity, path length, and width of tornadoes are rated according to a scale developed by <br />T. Theodore Fujita and Allen D. Pearson. The Fujita-Pearson Tornado Scale is presented <br />below. Tornadoes classified as EFO-EF1 are considered weak, those classified as EF2-EF3 are <br />considered strong, while those classified as EF4-EF5 are considered violent. <br />80 <br />Commented [RK101]: https://www.weather.gov/safety/light <br />ning-fatalities <br />10-year average 2019 update <br />
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