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The Fargo F5 Tornado of 1957 - The Science Behind the Slow-Moving Monster 

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On June 20th 1957, a powerful F5 tornado tore through northern Fargo North Dakota, killing 12. While a somewhat rare occurrence for a violent tornado at that northerly latitude, it was photographed and filmed by dozens of onlookers, resulting in the most well-documented violent tornado of its era. Although often overlooked in the history of violent American tornadoes, it played an important role in the development of the Fujita scale, and was critical in providing empirical evidence of mesocyclone structure, of which features like wall and tail clouds had yet to be officially named. Today we will examine the conditions that caused this tornado, the lives that it affected in Fargo and beyond, and pour over Dr. Fujita’s fantastic detailed analysis of the event that was, quite frankly, way ahead of its time.
Sources and Further Reading
controlc.com/d0d816e0
Corrections (as they're discovered):
docs.google.com/document/d/e/...
Chapters
0:00 Intro
1:07 1950s Tornado Forecasting
5:14 The weather setup on 6/20/57
9:45 CORN???
11:10 The storms approach
14:12 The tornado's path
18:11 Munson family
19:27 Recovery efforts
19:47 Dr. Fujita's research
The Fargo F5 Tornado of 1957 - The Science Behind the Slow-Moving Monster

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16 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 711   
@weatherboxstudios
@weatherboxstudios Год назад
Hey everyone! It's inevitable that after I put out a video, I find out I've gotten a few things wrong. People way smarter than me often email me with incredible information and details I had not previously known, so I decided to create a corrections document for this and future videos which will be linked in the description below the sources. The document will be updated whenever I receive emails/messages with great information that I can then pass on to viewers. Thanks guys!
@pallmall5495
@pallmall5495 Год назад
No worries my friend. Unless you are James Spann you will never know everything about weather or what it has done. Great videos and keep them coming.
@encycl07pedia-
@encycl07pedia- Год назад
LEARN ENGLISH! FORECASTED ISN'T A WORD!!!!!!!!!!
@encycl07pedia-
@encycl07pedia- Год назад
FORECASTED IS NOT A WORD!
@encycl07pedia-
@encycl07pedia- Год назад
FORECASTED IS NOT A WORD!
@ns3421thelocomotive
@ns3421thelocomotive Год назад
What might happen if a tornado(hurricane sized) merged with a hurricane
@CeltonHenderson
@CeltonHenderson Год назад
Never ceases to amaze me how ahead of his time Dr. Ted Fujita was, just incredible.
@pavan5272
@pavan5272 Год назад
He was a beast of a meteorologist!
@DefinitelyNotEmma
@DefinitelyNotEmma Год назад
Japanese dedication at full display
@2345allthebest
@2345allthebest Год назад
Yo Celton.... Do you know this guy? Between the two of you I would imagine we might be able to get some very accurate tornado prediction in the future?? 😂
@Thicc_Cheese_Dip
@Thicc_Cheese_Dip Год назад
@@pavan5272 he had a degree in engineering and a passion for meteorology. It's why he thought outside the box.
@GetOffMyLog
@GetOffMyLog Год назад
​@@2345allthebest tornado forecasting has come a very long way in the last 20 years, and models get better as time goes on and computers get more powerful. It's gotten to the point where models can predict the formation of individual cells hours in advance. We're going to keep moving forwards towards better and better forecasting.
@rschiwal
@rschiwal Год назад
My uncle was a Fargo Tornado survivor. Either he, or a family he knew (Family story) just bought a new car. It was hot and the kids were eating ice cream in the back seat. The mom was worried about the new upholstery getting stained by the dripping ice cream. Later that day, the new car was totalled by a refrigerator.
@Cokercole
@Cokercole 4 месяца назад
Not funny.....that the car was destroyed but hahaha hahaha hahaha 😂
@officialsnoopplays
@officialsnoopplays 3 месяца назад
BY A REFRIGERATOR!? THATS MESSED UP
@sabrinaleedance
@sabrinaleedance 3 месяца назад
That's true irony
@joshuamlnarik5942
@joshuamlnarik5942 3 месяца назад
"That fridge still works to this day! FridgitripledoggDaire, tellyawhat"
@martimasters7704
@martimasters7704 2 дня назад
And then there was all kinds of food all over the seats! Seriously, how fortunate that no one was in the car when the tornado had touched down. Praise the Lord! Hallelujah! Amen.
@jobes8315
@jobes8315 Год назад
Holy cow, that Fujita report is insane and shows how one man's obsession can lead to great discovery and knowledge. And with as much detail that was included, obsession is an understatement.
@kimm6589
@kimm6589 Год назад
It's not an 'obsession', that's how we do things in science. He was more skilled than average at the time, though.
@calrivera8301
@calrivera8301 Год назад
totally obsessed. shut your finger mouth up. you'd have to be obsessed to create just detailed masterpiece of human ingenuity in the fog of war that existed in metrology in his time
@jobes8315
@jobes8315 Год назад
@Kim M I appreciate yours and other scientists contribution to society but ill have to disagree here, you usually see reports this detailed from a team of scientists, not 1 guy. He not only did all the calcs in the report, but animated by hand extremely detailed renditions of the event. No matter what field, there's always someone who goes beyond the definition of obsession to change that field dramatically, Fujita is that guy for meteorology.
@CMSonYT
@CMSonYT Год назад
They couldn't handle his sheer autism
@laraisokay
@laraisokay Год назад
@@kimm6589you cannot deny that the man had an incredible passion for what he did. He wasn’t just an average run-of-the-mill meteorologist. He changed the course of the science itself.
@StormGallade
@StormGallade Год назад
Born and raised in Fargo here. I've heard a ton of stories of this tornado and the devastation it brought to my hometown. The first time I had heard about it though was because of a picture in a restraunt downtown that I saw when I was young, and that very picture of this tornado kickstarted my interest for weather.
@Xfrtrex
@Xfrtrex Год назад
pin this
@lowwastehighmelanin
@lowwastehighmelanin Год назад
Whoa!
@Kyle-bm2eo
@Kyle-bm2eo Год назад
I’m from the Grand Forks area and have never even heard of this. Truly fascinating history though
@chacehahn6556
@chacehahn6556 Год назад
I’m from fargo too!!!
@i-cant-think-of-a-handIe
@i-cant-think-of-a-handIe Год назад
The same thing kinda happened to me, I was born in Lawrence county alabama (and still being raised💀) And I have heard stories after stories about an F5 Back in 1974 doing Lots of damage here And that was what kinda made me scared and interested in weather.
@13_cmi
@13_cmi Год назад
Those animations were incredible. You don’t even see things like that decades later.
@dragonlover7196
@dragonlover7196 Год назад
dr. fujita putting together such a coherent and _accurate_ analysis of the storm is absolutely wild. what a legend; even knowing that he's a founding father of our understanding of severe weather, his work astonishes me every time
@cyd160
@cyd160 Год назад
I experienced this tornado first hand! I was 10 years old at the time. We were on our way to a baseball game at the Twins stadium in north Fargo. As we headed toward the field from our car we saw the long tail funnel west of Fargo. We got in the car and went straight home. Turned on the radio and headed to the basement. The radio commentator said “it’s time to talk to the man upstairs”. In a few minutes the tornado struck. It sounded like a bunch of freight trains were going over our heads. We could see a little from the basement windows and saw debris flying past and tall trees bending over severely. It turned out that the main funnel was only about 1000 feet from where we were as the tornado had made a slight turn away from our house just a few city blocks before it would have hit us. We were lucky. Afterward it was like a disaster zone. Debris all over the yard including wood, blankets, and other personal stuff. We found hail the sizes of baseballs in the yard too. The next few days all you could hear was chain saws cutting up trees and other debris removal machines. The whole experience was terrifying.
@martimasters7704
@martimasters7704 2 дня назад
Thank you for sharing such a personal and harrowing experience. You write so well that I felt like I was there. So happy you made it through the storm okay. Praise the Lord and may He keep you & your loved ones safe for all the days to come!
@YeahNah100
@YeahNah100 Год назад
Now that I have learned that corn sweat is a factor, I can better understand how the 1990 Plainfield, Illinois tornado was able to become so ferocious. Excellent channel and glad the algorithm finally set it in front of me.
@Sing_A_Rebel_Song
@Sing_A_Rebel_Song Месяц назад
*looks judgingly at the corn fields across the street from me*
@believer2
@believer2 Месяц назад
​@@Sing_A_Rebel_SongMaybe toddler me was right to despise vegetables
@ErinsEnergy313
@ErinsEnergy313 3 месяца назад
My best friend's dad was Richard Shaw, the man carrying out one of the children who passed away. I remember her showing me the newspaper clipping. She wasn't born for another 12 years, but to this day, is very proud of her brave dad.
@maxdevos3201
@maxdevos3201 Год назад
I live in what used to be called Golden Ridge, which is now called Madison Unicorn Park. The location of my current home is directly under the path of the tornado. Strong evidence of the tornado remains to this day; there is a distinct grouping of post-60s construction in the area which perfectly follows the path of the tornado. It is very obvious from the ground what was struck by the tornado. I attend NDSU (what used to be the ND Ag College) and have taken many classes in Ladd hall. To see the tornado in the background of that image provides a level of gravity that I couldn't hope to put into words. It's difficult to describe the phenomenon of seeing pictures of places that are so ordinary to me, so everyday and mundane, such as the building where I have "that chem lab" or my own intersection on my favorite RU-vid channel, especially in this context. Definitely the coolest thing I've experienced in awhile, but also the most harrowing. It's also interesting that this event is so significant meteorologically, since from a weather perspective, Fargo is known for its catastrophic floods. One last thing that I thought you might find amusing; Prairie Rose, the city you denoted to the south, is a super interesting (and annoying) anomaly. It's about 20 houses that are completely enclosed by Fargo, and exists as a tax haven for the residents to leech off of city resources (namely flood protection) without paying local tax. The City of Fargo and PR have been in on-and-off legal disputes for decades. It's super funny to see someone unfamiliar with the area see it and (understandably) mark it as a real city.
@maxdevos3201
@maxdevos3201 Год назад
In 2009 and 2011, during record flood events, the city had to deploy a bunch of their own resources to prevent Prairie Rose from going underwater. The City website makes a number of "professionally snarky" comments about this.
@crowboy0666
@crowboy0666 Месяц назад
@@maxdevos3201 "professionally snarky" is my favorite genre of commentary i gotta be honest, it's just so funny to see people very eloquently and politely fuckin slam someone or something else, especially as an ela nerd. also i hope everyone living in prairie rose to dodge taxes wakes up to a flooded basement next time there's rain.
@Sing_A_Rebel_Song
@Sing_A_Rebel_Song Месяц назад
I’m sorry but who names a town Madison Unicorn Park? 😂
@missano3856
@missano3856 Месяц назад
Somewhere out in the Ridge there is(or was) a horseshoe stuck in a tree. I saw it once but I was pretty drunk and never found it again.
@RT-qd8yl
@RT-qd8yl 20 часов назад
@@crowboy0666 I can totally understand it though if they "spend" the taxes the same way other cities like Baton Rouge or Chicago do. Remember, there's 3 sides to every story.
@bambambam1807
@bambambam1807 Год назад
Awesome video, and Dr. Ted Fujita was so ahead of his time with that research paper. What I found most impressive was that he triangulated the pictures taken of the tornado to there exact location, and made a basic video on the tornado moving.
@Alex-tx2dh
@Alex-tx2dh Год назад
19:00 I remember reading about this story a year ago, after researching f5 tornadoes. It made me cry to first imagine the dead children and mom seeing it firsthand, to then picture the dad opening the paper at the lobby or coffee shop and reading his children were ripped apart. It definitely felt real in that moment of research, which was a shift from scrolling through what looked like open walled dollhouses but were really the homes of Fargo.
@Alex-tx2dh
@Alex-tx2dh Год назад
Also 21:10 WHAT?! I missed a whole half of this F5’s story
@agentmueller
@agentmueller 5 месяцев назад
Very well said. I’m from Moore. Since it’s this channel, I don’t think I need to say much else. I found myself tear up twice during this, especially for the father who got that kind of news, and something mundane most people wouldn’t think about. The army coming to town. I will never forget walking the streets of my hometown and it just looking like something out of the apocalypse. And then the army showed up, and the core of engineers set to helping our city folk and the army cooks were making meals and distributing them to anybody around who was hungry. It makes me tear up just writing this, it was an extremely traumatic experience for everybody involved even though we’ve become infamous for our tornados. I was in highschool and we went out for almost 8 hours helping people dig through their homes looking for pets, or looking for that one thing you would grab before you left your home on fire. Picture albums, etc. I always forget with the way the world is, that we are all Americans and we come together more than any other populace in the history of mankind when something catastrophic happens. We sat there as strangers looking through picture albums of elderly victims, and sitting on the front steps of what used to be their lifelong homes, and finding comfort in each other during a dark moment of our lives. I’ve always hoped that someday technology will progress to the point where we can zap the skies and disperse a tornado before it ever gets to take a single life. Now that would be an invention!
@atrainradio929
@atrainradio929 Год назад
Still never hear enough love for Ted Fujita. He’s literally the greatest meteorologist of all time; was decades ahead of his time and did it all as a recently immigrated Japanese man in a time of lingering racism from WWII.
@opticsking4909
@opticsking4909 Год назад
So brave and stunning
@moviemaker2011z
@moviemaker2011z Год назад
i mean, his logic and reasoning WAS flawed but it was still a very much welcomed inclusion because without his insight and dedication to trying to add meaning to the chaos its unlikely that we would have the EF scale that we have today. he was a good man that had good intentions and im sure if he was still around today he would be proud of what we have accomplished thanks to his original work and efforts.
@niagra898
@niagra898 11 месяцев назад
That’s a garbage pile of words if I’ve ever heard one. Wtf does “ Raaaaacism “ have to do with his admiration of weather.
@moviemaker2011z
@moviemaker2011z 11 месяцев назад
@@niagra898 did you miss the part about WWII? or are you blatantly ignoring that?
@niagra898
@niagra898 11 месяцев назад
@@moviemaker2011z Yes, I read it Nazi- and heard your dog whistle. How about you just try recognizing the man for his love of weather-not his skin color or point of origin k.
@NancyCollazo-rk7jh
@NancyCollazo-rk7jh Год назад
Born and raised in Fargo. I was 8 when this tornado occured. We stood on the west side of our house watching it for a long time until my mother herded all of us to the basement and we crawled under a couch that was turned over for shelter. My aunt and uncle who lived on the north side of Fargo, had a large wing back chair sucked through a small window and dropped into the neighbor's tree -chair was fully intact! Many very strange occurrences like that. Memories are very vivid of this tornado even after all these years!
@barrybrevik9178
@barrybrevik9178 Год назад
This is hilarious! Somehow, this video crept into my RU-vid feed, and by coincidence, I was in that tornado, but I was only 1 year old, so I do not remember it. I was told that we heard it on the radio and immediately sheltered in the basement. They said that the sound as it passed over the house was much like a freight train. I am grateful that this channel has posted this video so I could finally learn a lot more about an event that has been large in our family lore. Mom and grandma would go on and on with their stories about how the roof came off every house in the neighborhood, and then it rained inside of them. The windows and contents of kitchen cabinets were reduced to powdered glass, which was deposited over every surface. Men came down from Canada, but there was still a lack of manpower, so the contractors could not meet the demand for home repairs, and many people went months before being able to live in their homes. They also mentioned that the people "on the other side of the tracks" had no basements, so they fled, which caused a big traffic jam. Evidently, there was a trailer park that was hit, and those people who had not already fled were lucky to be alive. My dad was the radio and tv farm reporter for WDAY at the time, and he had kept a scrap book full of newspaper articles about the tornado. I am sorry to write so much; the video stimulated my memory of the stories.
@elainekoester3340
@elainekoester3340 2 месяца назад
Was/is your dad Ernie Brevik?
@npeace312
@npeace312 Год назад
Seeing that photo of the man carrying the dead girl make me cry so much. Her family lost so much. It's heartbreaking.
@2345allthebest
@2345allthebest Год назад
Work like this really makes RU-vid shine... Its ability to bring us content creators like Weatherbox is a joy to behold. So many of us without this platform would never discover such educational, fascinating entertainment. Thank you so much for your hard work and for sharing your passion with us!
@P1nkR
@P1nkR Год назад
It is a sad thing I can only give it a single like. I would love to be able to tell RU-vid: "This, push this!"
@cnmnnaturalist
@cnmnnaturalist Год назад
Dr. Fujita's impeccable attention to detail and using animation to illustrate the behavior of storms is always amazing to me. He had a real gift for documentation and I'm sure he had an insatiable curiosity. This tornado was truly tragic, but I shudder to imagine what would happen if the same thing happened in Fargo today, as the population density is MUCH higher.
@Version135
@Version135 Год назад
That picture was heartbreaking but I'm so glad you put it in. It's easy to get fascinated by these storms and forget the human cost. I have a 4.5 y/o daughter so that hit hard. Love your videos but this one was out of the park.
@OuterGalaxyLounge
@OuterGalaxyLounge Год назад
I love this way of telling the story, triangulating the photos with the locations as the storm tracked. I've heard about the Fargo tornado for many years but have never seen a presentation this good about it. Congratulations on this first-rate work.
@PelicanGuy
@PelicanGuy Год назад
This has to be one of my favorite tornado events...one hour early lead time...unheard of! Dr. Fujita was THAT guy when it came to tornado research. I truly appreciate his work. I would love to see your video analysis on the Jackson (Candlestick Park), Miss. tornado of 1966.
@jackzimmer6553
@jackzimmer6553 Год назад
The animation that Dr. Fujita put together on the wall and tail cloud blew me away! He meticulously studied that tornado and others including the Xenia one in 1974. What he learned saved untold numbers of lives in the future. Great presentation as well!
@16BitDisaster
@16BitDisaster Год назад
We always get cool videos about weather setups that lead to massive storms and tornadoes, but I wonder if a video about days that are forcast to be big but bust would be interesting. A meteorological breakdown of how all the ingredients for tornadoes are there, but for one reason or another it falls flat would be a pretty cool type of video.
@Cereal421
@Cereal421 Год назад
Convective Chronicles has an analysis video of the 5/20/19 high risk day that turned out to be a bust.
@16BitDisaster
@16BitDisaster Год назад
@@Cereal421 I should check that out for sure!
@yochva
@yochva Год назад
I know this is a minor detail, but I love how you match your hairstyle and outfit to the era you're discussing. A minor detail that makes my particular inner history nerd giggle every time.
@vitreus0359
@vitreus0359 Год назад
Seeing a well built video around such an early F5 in the history books has me stoked to see a modern video of the F5's that occurred near I. 1956 Comstock Park F5 and more importantly, the 1953 Flint-Beecher F5. Can't wait!
@danielwieten8617
@danielwieten8617 Год назад
Have you seen @carlyannawx’s Flint/Beecher video? She did a really good job. I put Hudsonville/Comstock Park 1956 on my list too cuz I’m from Muskegon. Would love to hear the story told in detail
@vitreus0359
@vitreus0359 Год назад
@@danielwieten8617 I have seen. It is a pleasure to see the past with future technology, and all the in-depth coverage of all these events that modern people can recall and/ or relate.
@cosmo3485
@cosmo3485 Год назад
​@@danielwieten8617 Would love to see either of those as I spend a lot of time between Brighton and Holland.
@Thicc_Cheese_Dip
@Thicc_Cheese_Dip Год назад
I'd love to see a video on the May 1896 outbreak sequence. Even with the dearth of information, it was still arguably one of the most wicked outbreak sequences, alongside the Flint-Worcester outbreak sequence and the May-June 1917 outbreak sequence. And being a resident of NorTex, the Pilot Point-Sherman F5 is intriguing as it was the only F5 to hit the DFW area and was arguably the 19th century's answer to the May 3, 1999 F5 tornado.
@jm94008
@jm94008 Год назад
The production value of these videos is crazy, I’m so happy every time I get a new weatherbox notification!
@mandelbro777
@mandelbro777 Год назад
Fujita was one of those rare individuals who could pioneer an entirely new industry within the one brain. That report is utterly epic. To say it was thorough would be an understatement.
@Baldevi
@Baldevi Год назад
I would love to see your analysis of the Jarrell TX Tornado, the infamous "Dead Man Walking." It was a monster, regardless of it's F-scale rating's accuracy.
@Thicc_Cheese_Dip
@Thicc_Cheese_Dip Год назад
I'd say the F5 rating was deserved, and the winds were probably well into the F5 range despite the EF scale being generally more accurate on DIs and wind indicators. I will say that the majority of structures in Double Creek Estates weren't built very well, but the totality of destruction renders that point moot in Jarrell's case.
@Caddynars
@Caddynars 10 месяцев назад
@@Thicc_Cheese_DipI can understand why the rating was questionable. It wasn’t just the poor build quality of Double Creek estates, but also because the tornado’s forward momentum grinded to a nearl halt, and it just sat over the area like a giant blender.
@ColtsPacers1
@ColtsPacers1 2 месяца назад
​@@Caddynarsthat's the thing about the F/EF scale. It seems to be based on damage markers as a measurement of estimated wind speeds, at least that's my understanding of it. Which is why the giant El Reno tornado in 2013, despite having wind estimates at or near 300 mph (which is deep into EF5 range) was only considered an EF3.
@roberthoffhines5419
@roberthoffhines5419 Год назад
God rest the Munson family. The sweetest thing on earth is a five year-old little girl. The quality and detail of some of those B&W photos is astounding. And horrifying.
@fordgtguy
@fordgtguy 2 месяца назад
The story of the Munson family hit hard, I feel so bad for the father. Black and white pictures are actually clearer than color pictures.
@HexedPedestrian
@HexedPedestrian Год назад
I lived in Fargo for 12 years. Older generations in Fargo still talk about this storm. If you live in Fargo for any amount of time you'll hear a story about it.
@steffen_yee
@steffen_yee Год назад
Incredible video you made here. I felt that story with the father hearing about his children in the newspaper. Truly a tragedy
@Razzledazzy
@Razzledazzy Год назад
I never really thought about how the fujita scale was made but hearing all the work he did on this particular tornado was incredible.
@jm5390
@jm5390 Год назад
Those graphics and pictures used to show the lifecycle of the tornado were really cool. 🤩 As for events to cover next, you should do the Terrible Tuesday tornado that impacted Wichita Falls, TX in April 1979. That was also a well documented tornado hitting a populated area.
@williammetcalf1421
@williammetcalf1421 Год назад
Just wanna say i love the fact that you incorporate VHS / Retro style looking graphics on your videos. Big fan and former Lakewood Ohioian !
@dillyboyq
@dillyboyq Год назад
Ahhhhh you know it’s an absolutely premium Friday when Weatherbox uploads 🥰 your vids are absolutely top tier and I enjoy every single one. Keep it up! ❤
@agentmueller
@agentmueller 5 месяцев назад
I posted this on another comment, but figured I’d repost it here. I’m from Moore. Since it’s this channel, I don’t think I need to say much else. I found myself tear up twice during this, especially for the father who got that kind of news, and something mundane most people wouldn’t think about. The army coming to town. I will never forget walking the streets of my hometown and it just looking like something out of the apocalypse. And then the army showed up, and the core of engineers set to helping our city folk and the army cooks were making meals and distributing them to anybody around who was hungry. It makes me tear up just writing this, it was an extremely traumatic experience for everybody involved even though we’ve become infamous for our tornados. I was in highschool and we went out for almost 8 hours helping people dig through their homes looking for pets, or looking for that one thing you would grab before you left your home on fire. Picture albums, etc. I always forget with the way the world is, that we are all Americans and we come together more than any other populace in the history of mankind when something catastrophic happens. We sat there as strangers looking through picture albums of elderly victims, and sitting on the front steps of what used to be their lifelong homes, and finding comfort in each other during a dark moment of our lives. I’ve always hoped that someday technology will progress to the point where we can zap the skies and disperse a tornado before it ever gets to take a single life. Now that would be an invention!
@MoldySpace
@MoldySpace Год назад
You always do such an amazing job of conveying the human element of severe weather and the impacts it has on real people, but today's hit extra hard. Great work as always.
@joshuawarkentin9199
@joshuawarkentin9199 Год назад
It's amazing how far climatology and weather forecasting have come in such a short period of time. Thanks for another great video!
@Beanrock124
@Beanrock124 Год назад
It’s always a good day when this channel uploads!
@architect0164
@architect0164 Год назад
facts
@SpecialSauce5
@SpecialSauce5 Год назад
I have to say as a weather nerd, you do such a great job breaking down these past historic events! Really glad I came across this channel!
@LMacNeill
@LMacNeill Год назад
I don't know if it's a big enough event for your channel, but there was a tornado outbreak on March 24, 1975 in Georgia. One of the tornadoes of this outbreak hit the Governor's mansion. It's one of my earliest memories -- a couple of weeks before my 5th birthday. I remember hearing the tornado coming, and my parents running in and grabbing my sister and me, taking us down into the basement. Apparently it skipped right over our house -- in one direction, about a mile-and-a-half away, there was a huge grove of trees that were destroyed and a couple of houses were damaged, and about a mile-and-a-half in the opposite direction, was the governor's mansion. We were right smack in the middle, completely untouched. Anyway, if you wanted to cover that one, I'd definitely watch a video about it. 🙂
@austinfairfield7621
@austinfairfield7621 Год назад
Thanks for doing the Fargo tornado, I learned more about it. Fargo is my hometown and it's interesting seeing the path of the tornado how it goes from 12th Ave N to 7th Ave N and back up to 12th Ave N, then follows 13th Ave N into Moorhead, MN.
@PamB95
@PamB95 2 месяца назад
Love that little ending you tacked on about the hurricane changing direction after the guy completed boarding up his window. lol
@ataricom
@ataricom Год назад
I think I probably read about Dr. F's paper and animations, but wtf why have I never actually seen them until now? It's horrifyingly tragic, yet one of the most brilliant, meticulous, nerdy thing I've ever seen. I love it! I actually started triangulating tornado video perspectives in Google Earth a few years ago, and I can only imagine how mind blowing it would be to show him how trivial it is to do these days, and as a hobby!
@sabrinaleedance
@sabrinaleedance Год назад
Wow , those old black and white photos of the developing tornado, mesocyclone and wall cloud are gorgeous, and so interesting
@raelewis9957
@raelewis9957 Год назад
You do a great job of mixing historic accounts, science and personal stories to bring it home. Thank you!
@fungillooo
@fungillooo Год назад
Love the aesthetic of your vids, your my fave weather RU-vidr:))
@Emily-fw1lq
@Emily-fw1lq Год назад
Someone just shared this video with me because they know my special interest is tornadoes, and I've never been happier. This video was awesome, and I'm so excited to have another weather RU-vid channel to binge!
@EvilApple567
@EvilApple567 Год назад
Truly a historic event here, the first documented F5 Cornado
@seanpellegrino2989
@seanpellegrino2989 Год назад
🌽🌽🌪🌽🌽
@debbieellett9093
@debbieellett9093 Год назад
I am so glad I found your channel! You are now my most favorite channel! Thank you for being so dedicated. 👏👍
@XxCrystalPhoenix
@XxCrystalPhoenix Год назад
This whole YT channel is a mood ❤
@MrButtermybanana
@MrButtermybanana Год назад
This channel is absolute gold. Between you and pecos hank, I can't think of anyone doing weather videos with such HIGH quality. Great stuff!
@johnshields6852
@johnshields6852 Год назад
The slow moving ones are brutal, like the Jarell tornado slowly grinding everything in it's path.
@PereMarquette1223
@PereMarquette1223 Год назад
A video on Michigan’s sole EF5 (F5) is needed, it completely wiped out the towns of Hudsonville and Standale. Also could do the Flint-Beecher tornado, the last tornado to kill over 100 people before the Joplin EF5 a few years ago. Honorable mention to the EF3 that tore right through the middle of downtown Kalamazoo in the early 1980’s.
@mrjayjay124
@mrjayjay124 Год назад
Fantastic work again Steve! This tornado has been something of interest for me for a while. Loved the video!
@mercurialjove460
@mercurialjove460 Год назад
Wow I really loved this video! I especially loved the nice juxtaposition and transition between the two early tornado science breakthroughs: the first (broadcasted) tornado forecast and the development of the first tornado rating scale. I know some detail about the two March 1948 Tinker Tornados, but I was not so familiar with Dr. Fujita's early work and I loved learning more! There's a lot to be said about the Tinker Tornados, but here is some trivia that isn't talked about as often and may be interesting: While most of the focus (rightfully) is on the meteorologists who did the forecasting, Maj. General Borum's background was also oddly perfect and necessary for the events of that week to occur. First, he was effectively from Oklahoma having moved there very young and was naturally familiar with the conditions there. In fact, he was the longest serving commander of Tinker and the only one to retire to OK. Second, his skills and performance during the war were so good that post-war he was involved with the Pacific Atom bomb tests. It's incredibly interesting to me that many of the greatest developments in tornadogenesis in the 20th Century are connected to the Atom bombs. Of course Dr. Fujita is more directly connected to THE A-bombs than Maj. General Borum, but I have to think that especially as a man of the Great Plains being told forecasting tornados was impossible when he had seen the impossible become possible just 2-3 years earlier played a role in his actions.
@loficampingguy9664
@loficampingguy9664 Год назад
An excellently informative and entertaining video. Thank you for all the work you put into these, it does not go unnoticed by any of us :)
@Cleanse_
@Cleanse_ Год назад
Dude the music you use is amazing, the vibes your videos give of are my favorite. Plus super informative, just an amazing channel.
@bri-was-here
@bri-was-here Год назад
You do a great job going into just enough detail that someone like me with an art degree can follow everything without feeling lost on the data points and acronyms
@arg2981
@arg2981 Год назад
Masterful and thoroughly appreciated explanation! BRAVO!!
@haysgoodman8068
@haysgoodman8068 Год назад
I’d like to see analysis of the Barneveld, WI F5 of 1984. There were a number of papers written on this storm from UW-Madison, and the emphasis of the influence of the Nocturnal Jet on supercellular development was especially interesting.
@jeffarbogash4269
@jeffarbogash4269 Год назад
Ah yes Barneveld the closest radar was in neenah 100+miles to the northeast
@Thicc_Cheese_Dip
@Thicc_Cheese_Dip Год назад
The Nocturnal Low-Level Jet's influence on storm strength has been seen elsewhere, notably the Blackwell-Udall outbreak, the Greensburg outbreak and the 2019 Memorial Day Weekend outbreak. I'd go as far as to say that wind shear and the dryline can be underrated with some tornado setups, as seen on April 19th, 2023 in OKC.
@mattschneider6773
@mattschneider6773 10 месяцев назад
I remember Barneveld. Was a monster and hit in the middle of the night.
@HistoricUSRoute20
@HistoricUSRoute20 Год назад
Well done on this video! You are bringing to life the storms and people we learned about and studied in college (back in the 90s). Truly appreciate your effort and dedication to these classics.
@youtubehatesus2651
@youtubehatesus2651 Год назад
This was very well made, very informative, very interesting, and at times downright exciting.
@michaelc6593
@michaelc6593 3 месяца назад
Amazing video!! So much appreciation for early meteorologists and especially Dr. Fujita!!
@eschdaddy
@eschdaddy Год назад
Another great video and detail! Definitely seeing your production improvements as you go.
@kihunipunk
@kihunipunk Год назад
I LOVE your videos, fam. They're so educational- and entertaining- all at once. Thank you for your work.
@jacobthayer236
@jacobthayer236 Год назад
Just incredibly well done! Love the videos you make!
@silber724
@silber724 Год назад
This channel is wonderful. Love that classy vibe.
@ATrainGames
@ATrainGames Год назад
Wow. What a fantastic video! Thanks for sharing!
@homeequityloan1746
@homeequityloan1746 Год назад
Thank you for linking his paper. I’ve never had the opportunity to read through it.
@91rattoyota
@91rattoyota Год назад
Very well detailed video sir! I really do enjoy learning how things have changed with time as far as forecasting goes. Fujita was way ahead of his time, just brilliant!!!!!
@Isaactheweathernerd
@Isaactheweathernerd Год назад
Awesome video, man. I've always loved the tornado videos you do!
@Funz
@Funz Год назад
this channel is so friccin great man. keep up the good work
@joshb_1111
@joshb_1111 Год назад
This is fascinating, well done for providing such a detailed and enjoyable video
@sreynolds777
@sreynolds777 Год назад
That was an awesome video - thank you for your work.
@PulseFireRL
@PulseFireRL Год назад
excellent video as always dude. i call myself a weather nerd yet i have never seen fujita's animations of this event before. so so cool. and the way you packaged it all is perfect, keep it coming
@weatherboxstudios
@weatherboxstudios Год назад
Thank you so much man!!
@benjaminphelps561
@benjaminphelps561 Год назад
Im from fargo, and it blew me away when i was a kid when i learned how important my city was in the story of tornado understanding and categorization, we were a very small town back then, even now we are small, and to think we contributed to something this important makes me happy, not alot of love for the upper plains.
@jabcreations
@jabcreations Год назад
Really nice nugget of history and weather, thanks for posting.
@petraperez1075
@petraperez1075 Год назад
Your videos are so great! I didn’t realize that you do your own animations that is pretty awesome.
@youtubehatesus2651
@youtubehatesus2651 Год назад
Hurray. A new video. These are so well done they are a treat.
@markpeelgb
@markpeelgb Год назад
Excellent graphics and explanations. This is a really impressive example of what can be done on social media. Congratulations!
@thoriumhandler
@thoriumhandler Год назад
Yet another fantastic weatherbox presentation! Thank you!
@pmzephyr22
@pmzephyr22 10 месяцев назад
The reference link you included is absolutely fascinating in every detail. I will work my way through Dr. Fugita's treatise, the introductory remarks were masterful. The writings here are a bit daunting but vital to understand. Thanks for being so thorough and understandable in all of your videos. I, and I think WE all have learned so much.
@teacfan1080
@teacfan1080 Год назад
I live in Fargo. Every year on the anniversary of the tornado people talk about it. This was a great video about this event!
@lucasmetz2403
@lucasmetz2403 Год назад
As a North Dakotan, I find it interesting that while 2 F-5 tornadoes occurred in ND in the mid-50s (the other near the city of Cannon Ball) none have occurred since. Great video!
@stephenmorton6180
@stephenmorton6180 Год назад
AMAZING - Dr. Fujita! Thank you for this!
@LenHealsU
@LenHealsU 5 месяцев назад
Just love your professional informative videos!
@calvinhobbes6646
@calvinhobbes6646 Год назад
Love your videos, man. Best weather content on RU-vid, for sure.
@condensermike
@condensermike Год назад
Dr. Ted Fujita is a legend. Great video, man!
@LDQBBQ
@LDQBBQ Год назад
Great work. Very well done.
@darrelchovanec9150
@darrelchovanec9150 Год назад
Excellent and interesting as always! Keep up the great work!
@zcoldlel
@zcoldlel Год назад
im a simple guy. i see a new weatherbox upload, i simply click.
@racerxfile
@racerxfile Год назад
The video analysis that Ted Fujita and the U of Chicago did on this storm is truly a labor of love.
@joshpeterson2203
@joshpeterson2203 Год назад
Such a interesting video! Thanks for all your hard work and efforts it shows
@BooBooKittyFuzzyBritches
@BooBooKittyFuzzyBritches Год назад
Your videos are fantastic! So informative & entertaining. Thank you!
@alyssinwilliams4570
@alyssinwilliams4570 Год назад
Not just a good video about a tragic event, but delving into some of hte history of storm and tornado forecasting and Dr Fujita's work makes this amazing. Definitely will be watching more content from this channel (esp. the Edmonton tornado; I still remember news reports about it, I live in Calgary 300ish KM to the south so news about it was everywhere)
@chacaabbaylee768
@chacaabbaylee768 4 месяца назад
You do an absolutely fantastic job buddy. I pray that one day you can help save lives with all your info.
@entr0pix
@entr0pix 3 месяца назад
thank you dr fujita, for helping us understand severe weather better and saving countless lives!!!
@nataliaschuler3949
@nataliaschuler3949 Год назад
Dr. Fujita’s animations are incredible!! I love love love it when you can watch a brilliant mind combine science and art. In my humble opinion that’s how you spot a visionary.
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