The Hunt for Missing Tornadoes: Using Satellite Imagery to Detect and Document Historical Tornado Damage in Canadian Forests

Author:

Kunkel Joanne12,Hanesiak John13,Sills David2

Affiliation:

1. a Department of Environment and Geography, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada

2. b Northern Tornadoes Project, Faculty of Engineering, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada

3. c Centre for Earth Observation Science, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Historical tornado events from 1982 to 2020 were documented within Canada’s forested regions using high-resolution satellite imagery. Tornado forest disturbances were identified using a three-step process: 1) detecting, 2) assessing, and 3) dating each event. A grid of 120 km × 120 km boxes was created covering Canada (excluding the extreme north). Of the 484 boxes, 367 were manually searched. Once a long, narrow region of tree damage was detected, it was first cross-referenced with known tornado databases to ensure it was a unique event. Once events were classified as either tornadic or downburst, the coordinates of the start, worst damage, and end locations were documented, as well as the direction of motion, damage indicators, degree of damage, estimated maximum wind speed, and F/EF-scale rating. In total, 231 previously unknown tornadoes were identified. In Ontario, 103 events were discovered, followed by 98 in Quebec, 9 in Manitoba, 6 in Saskatchewan, 9 in Alberta, 5 in British Columbia, and 1 in New Brunswick. The largest number of discovered tornadoes occurred in 2015, and the largest number of strong F2 tornadoes occurred in 2005. Most of the discovered tornadoes occurred in July for both F/EF1 and F/EF2 ratings. Most tornado tracks had widths between 200 and 400 m, and more than 50% of the tornadoes had a pathlength of less than 10 km. Of all the events that were discovered, 125 events could be fully dated, 19 were dated only by month, 41 were dated only by year, and 46 remained undated.

Funder

Western University, Northern Tornadoes Project

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

Reference48 articles.

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3. On the relationship of tornado pathlength and width to intensity;Brooks, H. E.,2004

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5. Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society, 2015: Canada’s top ten weather stories for 2015. CMOS Doc., 25 pp., https://cmos.in1touch.org/uploaded/web/website/top_ten/EN_Final%20Top%20Ten%20Weather%20Stories%20in%202015.pdf.

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