Type | Tornado outbreak, Hailstorm, Winter storm |
---|---|
Duration | February 10–11, 2009 |
Highest winds |
|
Lowest pressure | 986 mb (29.12 inHg) |
Tornadoes confirmed | 14 |
Max. rating1 | EF4 tornado |
Duration of tornado outbreak2 | 26 hours and 26 minutes |
Largest hail | 4.5 inches (11 cm) in Oklahoma |
Maximum snowfall or ice accretion | 6 inches (15 cm) |
Fatalities | 15 fatalities (8 tornadic, 7 non-tornadic) |
Damage | $1.7 billion (2009 USD) |
Power outages | >2,272,000 |
Areas affected | Central and Eastern United States |
Part of the tornado outbreaks of 2009 1Most severe tornado damage; see Enhanced Fujita scale 2Time from first tornado to last tornado |
On February 10–11, 2009, a broad-scale damaging wind event and small tornado outbreak affected the Central and Eastern United States. During the two-day period, 14 tornadoes touched down in seven states. Oklahoma was struck by six tornadoes, the most of any state. The six tornadoes in Oklahoma also tied the record for the most tornadoes ever recorded in the state during the month of February, which would later be broken in 2023.[1] The first day of the outbreak produced the most tornadoes; the second brought mainly high wind damage and rain or snow in most of the Northeast.
The storm system responsible for the tornado outbreak resulted from the unusual congruence of a cold, dry system, originating in the Four Corners and a warm, moist system, moving north out of Texas. Complicating factors included daytime heating and a strong wind field favorable to the creation of circulating thunderstorms. On the second day, the stronger cold front limited discrete supercell activity and the risk of tornadoes decreased significantly. A squall line, however, produced high winds and rain along the river valleys, primarily those of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers. A tight pressure-gradient behind the cold front led to a large area of damaging non-thunderstorm winds across the Midwest and Ohio Valley. This squall line continued to renew its energy as it passed through the Midwest, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, and New England, causing wind and water damage, and dumping 6 inches (15 cm) of snow in central and eastern Massachusetts. The resulting power outages affected homes throughout the northeastern seaboard.
The widespread damaging winds left an estimated $1.7 billion (2009 USD) in damage across the Ohio River Valley and Southeastern United States. A small tornado outbreak accompanied the storm, with 14 confirmed across 7 states. The most significant damage occurred in Oklahoma from two tornadoes in the Oklahoma City metropolitan area and a deadly EF4 tornado that destroyed large parts of Lone Grove. The EF4 tornado killed eight people and injured 46 others.