It intensified to catastrophic levels when it officially reached Joplin city limits at 5:41 p.m. The twister formed near the junction of State Highway JJ and West 32nd Street. NWS reports the tornado initially hit at 5:34 p.m. This provided most residents with at least 17 minutes of lead time in advance of the tornado, according to an NWS Story Map. After communicating with emergency officials, the NWS Forecast Office in Springfield issued a tornado warning for Joplin and neighboring communities at 5:17 p.m. “Two thunderstorms eventually merged just west of Joplin and began producing the mega tornado.”įast-forward several hours, storm chasers and spotters reported multiple vortices just west of Joplin city limits. “At one point there were five or six storms all capable of producing, or ones that produced a tornado over in southeast Kansas,” recalls KY3 Chief Meteorologist Ron Hearst. Meteorologists tracked a supercell thunderstorm forming between southeast Kansas and southwest Missouri, though it wasn’t exactly clear what the storm system would bring into the early evening. CT, indicating conditions were favorable for tornadoes in Missouri and three neighboring states.Ĭold fronts clashed with warm fronts throughout the afternoon. ![]() Two days later, NWS issued a tornado watch around 1:30 p.m. The National Weather Service projected the potential for a severe weather system two days in advance, issuing an alert for a hazardous weather outlook on May 20, 2011. Fewer than one percent of all tornadoes reach EF5 status, while even fewer of those strike populated areas, like Joplin, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The 2011 twister not only embodied characteristics of the “Tornado Alley” region but carried them out to an extent rarely seen in the Midwest.
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