California 'fire tornado' had 143 mph winds, possibly state's strongest twister ever

Authored by usatoday.com and submitted by chefranden
image for California 'fire tornado' had 143 mph winds, possibly state's strongest twister ever

CLOSE Wildfires spreading across California are creating their own weather, including the firenado. With winds strong enough to tear roofs off houses, these whirling flames can be devastating. Just the FAQs, USA TODAY

A firenado is a spinning vortex column of ascending hot air and gases that rises from a fire and carries smoke, debris and flame aloft, according to the Bureau of Land Management's Glossary of Wildland Fire Terminology. (Photo: Ashley Smith, AP)

The devastating fire tornado that spun up during the Carr Fire last week had 143 mph winds, according to a preliminary report from the National Weather Service Thursday. This is equal to an EF-3 tornado on the five-level Enhanced Fujita Scale.

Dan Keeton, the meteorologist-in-charge at the National Weather Service in Sacramento, said the fact that the weather service was able to see the rotation of the 35,000-foot-tall plume on its radar — well over 100 miles south of Redding — was significant.

"I’ve never seen anything like that in my career," said Keeton, who has been with the weather service since 1985.

Also known as a fire whirl or firenado, the weather service described it as "a rotating column of fire induced by intense rising heat and turbulent winds. Intense fire whirls can be violent and cause damage similar to tornadoes."

Fire tornadoes range in size from less than 1 foot as much as 500 feet in diameter, the Bureau of Land Management said.

Before being evacuated, my friend @ReallyRedding Skip Murphy shot this amazing footage of a #Firenado in Redding, CA. pic.twitter.com/CrfOO4nlcz — Craig Padilla (@CraigPadilla) July 27, 2018

"Depending on the final number, this might actually be the strongest ‘tornado’ in California history, even if it wasn’t formally a tornado," UCLA climate scientist Daniel Swain told the Los Angeles Times.

The weather service has radars in Davis, just west of Sacramento, and at Beale Air Force Base east of Marysville.

A “serious accident review” team from the weather service and California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection is in Redding to collect information about the deadly fire.

It spun up between 7:30 and 8:00 p.m. PT on July 26. Preliminary reports include the collapse of high tension power line towers, uprooted trees, and the complete removal of tree bark.

Craig Clements, the director of San Jose State University's Fire Weather Research Laboratory, told BuzzFeed that the vortex of fire may have been the strongest ever recorded. "This is historic in the U.S.," he said. "This might be the strongest fire-induced tornado-like circulation ever recorded."

Wow! THIS is what produced the #CarrFire#FireTornado last Thursday! Two distinct plumes of rotation associated with the rapidly-rising updrafts! The southern one produced the EF3 fire tornado – the only other instance of which was in Canberra, Australia on Jan. 18, 2003! 🔥 pic.twitter.com/B8hYbid2HZ — Matthew Cappucci (@MatthewCappucci) August 3, 2018

So far the Carr Fire has claimed six lives, destroyed over 1,500 structures, and burned some 206 square miles, Cal Fire said. That makes it the sixth-most destructive and 20th largest fire in state history.

The damage to the region is so severe – roads are blocked by downed power poles, bridges are damaged and fires continue to burn – that more than 20,000 evacuees still have not been allowed to return to their homes.

Contributing: Jenny Espino, The Redding Searchlight; The Associated Press

This dad and his family barely escaped a terrifying "fire tornado" in Northern California https://t.co/2YcsoPwDCZpic.twitter.com/8WugufftqD — BuzzFeed Storm (@BuzzFeedStorm) July 30, 2018

Read or Share this story: https://usat.ly/2MfYjLS

Meowing_Hard on August 5th, 2018 at 06:56 UTC »

Fun fact, they didnt know they could happen till the bushfire of canberra Australia.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rqYEeivt8Eg

One I got to see with my own eyes unfortunately. was in the park in this video.

clever_screename on August 5th, 2018 at 03:44 UTC »

I live in Redding (carr fire) and the local news has footage of unburned but SHINGLE LESS roofs from the fire winds.

Home_ on August 5th, 2018 at 03:33 UTC »

You people joke but if these fire tornadoes somehow get out to water, they’ll harness the power of all the elements and the world will be triple-threat tag team fucked