2008 Parkersburg–New Hartford tornado

Last updated
710 of a mile (1.1 of a km) wide as it struck Parkersburg. Seven people died in town, several of which were taking shelter in basements. [5]

New Hartford

Remains of a house that was swept away at EF5 strength at the north edge of New Hartford. NewHartfordHouseDamage.JPG
Remains of a house that was swept away at EF5 strength at the north edge of New Hartford.

After passing through Parkersburg, the EF5 tornado continued eastward towards the neighboring town of New Hartford. Additional rural homes were obliterated and swept away in this area, and a granary was destroyed. [3] The tornado maintained EF5 strength as it reached New Hartford, impacting a housing development on the northern side of the town at 5:09 pm CDT. Multiple well-built homes with anchor bolts were again completely swept away, and vehicles were thrown long distances and mangled beyond recognition, a few of which only had their frames left. One home in this area had even its basement contents swept away, including the home-owner who was killed. [3] Numerous headstones were toppled at the New Hartford Cemetery, and shrubs and trees were completely debarked. [4]

Waterloo–Dissipation

Past New Hartford, the tornado weakened dramatically and passed just north of Waterloo and Cedar Falls, shrinking to about 14 mile (400 m) in width as it continued to impact rural areas. Damage along this section of the path was mostly minor, though a few farms sustained EF2 damage. Intense cycloidal marks were again noted in farm fields in this area. [2] [3] As the tornado approached Dunkerton, it turned to the east-northeast, missing the town and growing up to 1.2 miles (1.9 km) wide. Some re-intensification occurred in this area, as consistent high-end EF2 damage was noted at multiple farms. Numerous hog containment buildings were destroyed, and a few homes that were impacted sustained some collapse of exterior walls. Mud and corn stubble was picked up from farm fields near Dunkerton and plastered thickly against fences, power poles, and houses. Shortly before reaching Fairbank, the tornado abruptly dissipated. [2] [3]

Aftermath

Seven people were killed in Parkersburg and two were killed in New Hartford, where the housing development was destroyed. 288 homes in Parkersburg, and 88 in and around New Hartford were damaged or destroyed. While initially rated high-end EF4, a final assessment determined that the tornado was an EF5 with estimated peak winds of about 205 miles per hour (330 km/h). It was determined that 17 homes and an industrial building sustained EF5 damage along the path. [7] According to FEMA and the Iowa Homeland Security and Emergency Management, damage was preliminary estimated at $6 million in northern Iowa including more than $3 million in Butler County alone. [8] While the tornado was caught on tape and photographed by spotters, a surveillance camera inside a bank in Parkersburg also caught the tornado on tape as the storm passed over the building. [9] Another surveillance camera showed the tornado ripping the roof off a house across a street before the video feed was lost. [10] After the tornado, Governor Chet Culver declared Butler and Black Hawk counties disaster areas due to the extensive storm damage. [11] The tornado was the first F5 or EF5 tornado in Iowa since one hit Jordan on June 13, 1976, and the second deadliest in Iowa since official record-keeping began in 1950. The deadliest tornado affected the Charles City area on May 15, 1968, and killed 13 while producing F5 damage. [12] On May 29, The Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier reported that lightweight debris from the Waterloo area, including photographs, check stubs, and "greeting cards and business records" from a Waterloo Walgreens, had been found in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, over 100 miles (160 km) away. [13]

Notes

  1. Trey Greenwood, a meteorologist with a Master's in Atmospheric Science, has a youtube video detailing specifics of cell mergers and gravity waves on the formation of the interest supercell. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MWt11TXiu5c&t=1145s&pp=ygUTcGFya2Vyc2J1cmcgdG9ybmFkbw%3D%3D
  2. Note the concrete walk-out basement wall partially pushed over on the left.

See also

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References

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2008 Parkersburg, Iowa tornado
Parkersburg tornado.jpg
The EF5 wedge tornado seen east of Parkersburg.