How Wednesday’s historic Maryland tornado outbreak happened (2024)

Numerous tornadoes tore through Maryland on Wednesday evening, leaving behind a trail of destruction and several injuries. The event emerged as one of the most significant tornado outbreaks in the state in years.

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Tornado season, explained

While tornadoes can happen at any time, spring brings the highest risk for the severe storms. April, May and June are, historically, the most active, with an average of 660 twisters a year in those months. The United States is more vulnerable to tornadoes than any other country, with an average of 1,150 to 1,200 a year.

What causes tornadoes?

The two primary ingredients are heat energy and turning winds: When warm, humid air meets wind shear, the resulting storm can sometimes twist into a tornado. Scientists say when the Gulf of Mexico is warmer than normal, it can make tornadoes worse. New research also suggests that climate change may be intensifying tornadoes at certain times of the year — as temperatures rise, more fuel is available for severe storms.

What is Tornado Alley?

Many people think that tornadoes are most common in the Great Plains, including the vertical stretch of states from Texas through Kansas and Nebraska. But your greatest risk of encountering a tornado is actually in the South — which is why some experts say the term “tornado alley” is misleading.

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Although multiple rotating thunderstorms — or supercells — produced twisters across many locations in Maryland, the one that swept across Montgomery, Howard and Baltimore counties was a particularly prolific tornado producer.

That supercell produced tornadoes near Darnestown, Poolesville, Gaithersburg, Olney, Columbia and Baltimore. Eyewitness footage showed that some of these twisters were quite large and more typical of what’s common in the Plains and the southern United States. Drone video even revealed a multivortex tornado at times, meaning the twister had multiple swirls that orbited around the central funnel.

The National Weather Service initially received 16 tornado reports from Maryland, one from Loudoun County, Va., and four from eastern West Virginia. After surveying storm damage Thursday, the Weather Service confirmed at least seven separate tornadoes touched down; five in Maryland, one in Virginia and one in West Virginia. The agency said it’s possible it will confirm additional tornadoes in the coming days.

Of the seven confirmed tornadoes, five were rated EF1 on the 0-to-5 Enhanced Fujita scale for tornado intensity, and two were rated EF0. Here’s the breakdown:

  • Inwood, W.Va.: EF0, peak winds 75 mph; on the ground less than one mile.
  • Leesburg, Va.: EF1, peak winds 95 mph; on the ground one mile.
  • Central Montgomery County, Md.: EF1, peak winds 105 mph; on the ground 12 miles from Poolesville to Gaithersburg.
  • Columbia, Md.: EF1, peak winds 95 mph; on the ground one mile.
  • Southern Baltimore County, Md.: EF1, peak winds 105 mph; on the ground 2.4 miles.
  • Middle River, Md.: EF1, peak winds 105 mph; on the ground 0.2 miles.
  • Eldersburg, Md: EF0, peak winds 85 mph; on the ground 4.4 miles

The swarm of twisters came somewhat as a surprise. Although the Weather Service forecast office serving the Washington region had mentioned that “a tornado or two” were possible in its Wednesday morning discussion, the agency’s Storm Prediction Center, based in Norman, Okla., never issued a severe thunderstorm or tornado watch. It only placed the area in a Level 1 out 5 “marginal risk” zone for severe storms, while highlighting a low risk of twisters.

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The Capital Weather Gang mentioned the slight possibility of tornadoes on social media Wednesday morning as well as in its early-afternoon forecast update, but no forecaster we know of anticipated one of the most prolific tornado outbreaks in recent memory.

Here’s what happened.

The elements that came together

Sometimes there are events in weather that have a low probability of happening but have a high impact if they do. Such was the case Wednesday.

The Washington-Baltimore region was in a tiny area where the necessary tornado-producing elements converged for a short window. What ensued was a kind of “micro-outbreak” that was very difficult to forecast given the sparse nature of our data observation networks.

The following diagram is our attempt to synthesize the key elements that came together.

A key feature that helped the supercell storms form was a warm front that was slowly tracking northward across the region throughout the day before stalling along the Mason-Dixon Line (thick red boundary line). It drew a very humid, warm and unstable air mass (maroon oval) into our area. Thick morning overcast gave way to enough breaks in the cloud canopy for the sun’s warmth to stoke instability further, and additional “storm fuel” arrived from the south. By late afternoon, we had an abundance of buoyant energy in the atmosphere.

The genesis of rotation in thunderstorms lies in the strong turning and speeding up of airflow in the lower atmosphere. The combination of a tiny pocket of deep wind shear (magenta stippled region) and low-level spin potential — called helicity (blue shaded pocket) — was perfectly collocated within the nose of the most unstable air. Much of the spin originated from the warm front, which had winds of strongly opposing directions on either side of its boundary. This attribute played a critical role in the storm outbreak. Warm fronts can be underrated in their potential to give rise to twisters.

Finally, the chance coincidence of a pocket of tightly wound, spinning air in the middle atmosphere set the stage for intensely rising air adding oomph to cloud updrafts. The bull’s eye of green colors and “X” marks this whirling pocket, which originated far to the west as a remnant of an earlier thunderstorm complex. We call this zone a “mesoscale convective vortex.” Typically about 10 to 20 miles wide, such vortexes drift along in the atmosphere’s flow. Wednesday’s vortex helped reignite the atmosphere hours later as it swept east into the Washington region.

Many historic Mid-Atlantic tornadoes have ties to such vortexes. On July 19, a strong tornado tore through Nash County, N.C., having formed because of a vortex pushing through the area. The infamous Sept. 28, 2001, tornado in College Park, Md., which killed two students, formed amid an outbreak largely caused by a mesoscale convective vortex.

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How the storms evolved

The supercell storms, containing rotating updrafts called a mesocyclone, formed and tracked along the warm front zone.

The southernmost supercell in Montgomery County displayed a prominent hook on radar — a swirling region of heavy rain wrapping around the mesocyclone — as shown in the visualization below:

Cyclic supercells north and northwest of Washington D.C. this evening from TIAD. #MDwx pic.twitter.com/EerhQeKgA1

— Landon Moeller (@landon_wx) June 6, 2024

Such hooks are often a telltale sign of a tornadic thunderstorm.

This rotating cell tracked out of Poolesville and into Gaithersburg, then to Olney. It appears that it was a “cyclic” tornado producer, responsible for repeated generation of tornadoes, or a family, spanning a long path from Northern Virginia’s Loudoun County to Baltimore County. Such a prolonged twister-producing storm — traveling about 40 miles before continuing on into northeast Maryland — is unusual in the Mid-Atlantic.

While the Montgomery County supercell was particularly prominent, it wasn’t the only one. The tracks of individual mesocyclones — which produced additional tornadoes — are shown in the image below.

Let’s drill down into the Montgomery County supercell when it was perhaps at the height of its tornadic intensity, near Gaithersburg. This was an exceptional tornado producer for our region, in that the Doppler radar at Dulles International Airport detected debris lofted as high as 11,000 feet.

The panel below shows four types of radar views of this cell, at 7:20 p.m. The upper left is standard “radar reflectivity” revealing rain intensity and, most importantly here, a prominent hook echo.

The upper right provides a key signature that shows the direction and speed of winds in the storm cell. The circled region points to a small but potent embedded counterclockwise circulation within the hook echo. This is called the “velocity couplet” — indicating by adjacent red and green patches where winds are blowing toward and away from the radar — and marks the location of the mesocyclone and embedded tornado.

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The bottom two panels present something rarely seen around here: indications of a “tornado debris signature, ” or cloud of lofted debris detected by the radar. This signature is perfectly correlated in time and space with the hook echo and velocity couplet. This trifecta of radar presentations is the hallmark of a radar-detected tornado on the ground.

For this reason, with a known tornado tracking through a densely populated region, the D.C.-Baltimore office of the Weather Service issued its first-ever “particularly dangerous situation” tornado warning for Montgomery County. These types of warnings were first implemented in the mid-2010s to call special attention to the most ominous large tornadoes.

How rare was this outbreak?

The Weather Service serving the Washington region issued 22 tornado warnings Wednesday, the fourth most since 1986. Tornadoes are most common in our areas between May and September, so this event occurred on schedule.

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All indications are that this was a very significant event in Maryland tornado history.

Half a dozen or more tornadoes have occurred on a single day in the state only seven times since 1950. Considering at least five were confirmed, it’s probable that the event will rank among the top 10 in terms of tornado production.

On July 7, 1994, 14 tornadoes touched down in Maryland, the most on record. More recently, there were 10 on Aug. 4, 2020, and 13 on June 1, 2012.

For the District, Virginia and Maryland combined, the biggest tornado day was associated with Hurricane Ivan in 2004, when 42 tornadoes were confirmed across the three jurisdictions. That day also featured a record 12 tornadoes rated at least 2 on the 0-to-5 scale for intensity across the region.

Although video of the central Montgomery County tornado showed a large cone-shaped funnel, this twister only produced EF1 damage, meaning Maryland hasn’t experienced a tornado rated 2 or higher in June since 1998. The last tornado rated 2 in any month hit Annapolis on Sept. 1, 2021.

Not since the infamous La Plata tornado on April 28, 2002, has a tornado rated 3 or higher struck Maryland. The La Plata twister was rated a 4 and killed three people. Less than a year before that was the College Park tornado, rated a 3.

How Wednesday’s historic Maryland tornado outbreak happened (2024)

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