1 / 12

The Columbus Day Storm October 12, 1962

The Columbus Day Storm October 12, 1962. Has It Happened Before? Could It Happen Again?. George R. Miller. “Normal” Pacific Northwest Windstorms. Approach coast from a WSW, W, or NW direction. Strongest pressure gradient ahead of storm. Wind generally southerly ahead of front.

marty
Télécharger la présentation

The Columbus Day Storm October 12, 1962

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Columbus Day Storm October 12, 1962 Has It Happened Before? Could It Happen Again? George R. Miller

  2. “Normal” Pacific Northwest Windstorms • Approach coast from a WSW, W, or NW direction. • Strongest pressure gradient ahead of storm. • Wind generally southerly ahead of front. • Once front passes, winds decrease and shift to southwesterly, westerly or northwesterly. • Can occur 13 months out of the year. • Can be very destructive. 100+ winds.

  3. A Typical Normal Pacific Northwest Wind Storm

  4. Columbus Day-Type Windstorms • Travel rapidly across Pacific 40oN or lower • Deep upper level trough 135-140oW • Move north along coast inside 130oW • Light SE winds ahead except where gaps in Coast Range • Strongest winds southerly AFTER low moves north • Favor time of year: October, November and early December • Often contain moisture from tropical storm • Often preceded 24 hours earlier by a weaker storm

  5. Paths of Columbus Day-Type Storms

  6. With the low center off Northern California T = 0

  7. When Low Center is Off NW Washington T + 12

  8. Previous windstorms 1. January 9, 1880: Oregon’s lowest Pressure (963mb, 28.45”) at Astoria 2. October 2, 1967: 115mph Newport; 90mph Morrison Bridge 3. November 13, 1981:100+ mph coast 4. January 21, 1921: 110 kts North Head Light House 5. Lewis & Clark November 22, 1805. Columbus Day-type storm?

  9. Observations from the Corps of Discovery: • Lewis: “rained all day; wind violent from the SE” • Clark: “the wind violent from the SSE.” • Gass: “the wind blew very hard from the south.” • Whitehouse: “A hard Storm arose in the course of last night…the wind high from the S.W.l • Who’s correct? • Perhaps they all are observations were listed as November 22. Who’s correct?

  10. Wind Directions Before and After T = 0 T + 12

  11. What About the Future? • 1. No doubt there will be more • 2. What effect will a warmer ocean have? • 3. Will there be adequate warning? • 4. Will we be prepared? • 5. What effect will demographics have? • 6. That’s it! You’ve been blown away!

  12. GO BEAVS!

More Related