Today’s blog looks back at details of the twin violent tornadoes that struck north MS, including Holly Springs in the far southeast metro, some statistics on the year that was, and looks ahead to an unusual river flooding event for this time of year.
Mississippi Twisters
With a primed atmosphere in place, meteorologists in the area hoped that a forecast for the potential of long-lived tornadoes would be a bust. Unfortunately, December 23 lived up to expectations and multiple tornadoes struck the region, including two long-lived violent twisters over north Mississippi that contributed to December being (for the first time on record) the deadliest tornado month of the year. There had only been 10 tornado fatalities this year prior to December 23. The year ended with (unofficially) 34. The graphic below and this page from NWS-Memphis summarize the events of the day.
The two long-tracked Mississippi tornadoes, an EF-3 and EF-4, were produced by the same storm with the first tornado lifting for less than 15 minutes prior to setting back down with even greater force. Marshall County, MS and Holly Springs, on the southeastern edge of our coverage area, experienced high-end EF-3 damage just southwest of Holly Springs before the tornado strengthened to EF-4 (170 mph maximum wind) as it hit Ashland in Benton County. The width of the tornado peaked at 3/4 of a mile and the combined path length of these sister twisters was 138 miles over a period of two and a half hours.
In sum, 11 people lost their lives from that supercell, which continued into the Nashville metro area early in the evening, prompting additional tornado warnings. The Weather Channel has called the first of the two north MS tornadoes the fifth worst of 2015 and the EF-4 the worst of the year nationwide. A scary afternoon across north Mississippi to be sure!
Statistical highlights of 2015
It certainly was an interesting year weather-wise in the Mid-South – from drought to deluge, bitter cold to scorching heat, early spring snow to early winter tornadoes! Some of you are like me and enjoy statistical tidbits, so here’s a handful of weather nuggets from the past year:
- Precipitation totaled 52.66″, which is 1.02″ below the long-term average and about 5″ less than 2014.
- The average temperature was 64.1°, which is 1.0° warmer than the long-term average and the 10th warmest year on record in Memphis (temperature records date back 140 years)
- January’s 1.30″ of precipitation ranked 9th driest January on record
- February’s 36.2° average temperature ranked 7th coldest February on record
- March 5: 3.1″ of snow was the 8th snowiest March day on record.
- March 6: low temperature of 15° was the 4th coldest temperature in March on record
- July’s 84.5° average temperature was 15th warmest on record and the average low temperature was 7th warmest
- November’s 57.8° average temperature was 4th warmest on record
- November’s 10.16″ of precipitation was 8th wettest on record
- December’s 54.1° average temperature was the 2nd warmest on record and the first time that December had no sub-freezing temperatures
- December 26: high temperature of 80° was the 2nd warmest December day on record
Deluges up north result in river flooding
Forecast for the first week of 2016
Erik Proseus
MWN Meteorologist
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