The Tornado Archive: Compiling and Visualizing a Worldwide, Digitized Tornado Database

Given inconsistencies in reporting methods and general lack of documentation, the creation of a unified tornado database across the world has been an elusive target for severe weather climatology purposes and historical interest. Previous online tornado documentation has also often been inconsistent...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 2024-07, Vol.105 (7), p.E1137-E1152
Hauptverfasser: Maas, Malcolm, Supinie, Timothy, Berrington, Andrew, Emmerson, Samuel, Aidala, Ava, Gavan, Michael
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container_end_page E1152
container_issue 7
container_start_page E1137
container_title Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
container_volume 105
creator Maas, Malcolm
Supinie, Timothy
Berrington, Andrew
Emmerson, Samuel
Aidala, Ava
Gavan, Michael
description Given inconsistencies in reporting methods and general lack of documentation, the creation of a unified tornado database across the world has been an elusive target for severe weather climatology purposes and historical interest. Previous online tornado documentation has also often been inconsistent or is now defunct. Many individual countries or continents maintain tornado information through either government-sponsored or independent organizations. The Tornado Archive was developed to create a first-of-its-kind digitized synthesis of worldwide tornado documentation, using the most complete sources of information available for regions known to be tornadically active. Spatial and temporal trends in tornado occurrence and reporting can be visualized through an interactive user interface with a variety of filtering methods and environmental reanalysis datasets, such as the fifth major global reanalysis produced by ECMWF (ERA5). The additional data introduced using Thomas Grazulis' Significant Tornadoes may be beneficial for tornado climatology studies over the United States. The Tornado Archive is also intended to be a collaborative exercise, with clear data attribution and open avenues for augmentation, and the creation of a common data model to store the tornado information will assist in maintaining and updating the database. In this work, we document the methods necessary for creating the Tornado Archive database, provide broader climatological analysis of spatiotemporal patterns in tornado occurrence, and outline potential use cases for the data. We also highlight its key limitations and emphasize the need for further international standardization of tornado documentation.
doi_str_mv 10.1175/BAMS-D-23-0123.1
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source American Meteorological Society; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Analysis
China
Geospatial data
Meteorological research
Storms
Tornadoes
United States
title The Tornado Archive: Compiling and Visualizing a Worldwide, Digitized Tornado Database
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