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The regionality and seasonality of tornado trends in the United States

Earth Sciences

The regionality and seasonality of tornado trends in the United States

M. Graber, R. J. Trapp, et al.

This groundbreaking research by Matthew Graber, Robert J. Trapp, and Zhuo Wang explores the intriguing shifts in tornado activity across the United States from 1960 to 2022, revealing significant decreases in tornado days amidst rising outbreak days. Discover how these patterns demand further exploration of climate influences and human impact!

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Continued efforts to build human resilience to the impacts of tornadoes require updated knowledge of tornado occurrences as well as how their occurrence characteristics may be changing in time and varying by region. We have temporally and geospatially disaggregated annual tornado reports in the United States and revealed that significant, long-term decreases in tornado days from 1960 to 2022 have occurred over the months of June through August, primarily within the Southern Great Plains. In contrast, long-term increases in days of tornado outbreaks have occurred over this period, particularly within the Southeast U.S. and during warm- as well as cool-season months. There are indications that these dichotomous linear trends in tornado days and tornado outbreaks have relaxed over the most recent decade. Our study highlights the need to better understand the role of internal climate variability and anthropogenic forcing in modulating tornado activity.
Publisher
npj Climate and Atmospheric Science
Published On
Jun 21, 2024
Authors
Matthew Graber, Robert J. Trapp, Zhuo Wang
Tags
tornado occurrences
temporal variations
geographical variations
climate variability
anthropogenic forcing
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