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Fisher County Natural Disasters and Weather Extremes

 
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The chance of earthquake damage in Fisher County is about the same as Texas average and is much lower than the national average. The risk of tornado damage in Fisher County is lower than Texas average and is higher than the national average.

Topics:Earthquake IndexVolcano IndexTornado IndexOther Weather Extremes EventsVolcanos NearbyHistorical Earthquake EventsHistorical Tornado Events

Earthquake Index, #49

Fisher County
0.03
Texas
0.04
U.S.
1.81

The earthquake index value is calculated based on historical earthquake events data using USA.com algorithms. It is an indicator of the earthquake level in a region. A higher earthquake index value means a higher chance of an earthquake.

Volcano Index, #1

Fisher County
0.0000
Texas
0.0000
U.S.
0.0023

The volcano index value is calculated based on the currently known volcanoes using USA.com algorithms. It is an indicator of the possibility of a region being affected by a possible volcano eruption. A higher volcano index value means a higher chance of being affected.

Tornado Index, #79

Fisher County
196.46
Texas
208.58
U.S.
136.45

The tornado index value is calculated based on historical tornado events data using USA.com algorithms. It is an indicator of the tornado level in a region. A higher tornado index value means a higher chance of tornado events.

Other Weather Extremes Events

A total of 9,020 other weather extremes events within 50 miles of Fisher County were recorded from 1950 to 2010. The following is a break down of these events:

TypeCountTypeCountTypeCountTypeCountTypeCount
Avalanche:0Blizzard:1Cold:4Dense Fog:0Drought:86
Dust Storm:3Flood:720Hail:5,686Heat:7Heavy Snow:17
High Surf:0Hurricane:0Ice Storm:16Landslide:0Strong Wind:32
Thunderstorm Winds:2,289Tropical Storm:1Wildfire:13Winter Storm:28Winter Weather:36
Other:81 

Volcanos Nearby

No volcano is found in or near Fisher County.

Historical Earthquake Events

A total of 1 historical earthquake event that had a recorded magnitude of 3.5 or above found in or near Fisher County.

Distance (miles)DateMagnitudeDepth (km)LatitudeLongitude
29.21978-06-165.31033.03-100.77

Historical Tornado Events

A total of 51 historical tornado events that had recorded magnitude of 2 or above found in or near Fisher County.

Distance (miles)DateMagnitudeStart Lat/LogEnd Lat/LogLengthWidthFatalitiesInjuriesProperty DamageCrop DamageAffected County
2.21965-08-31232°45'N / 100°22'W2.00 Miles20 Yards000K0Fisher
5.51962-05-31232°40'N / 100°22'W1.00 Mile20 Yards000K0Fisher
8.41967-04-12232°51'N / 100°28'W0.30 Mile200 Yards000K0Fisher
9.01967-04-12232°43'N / 100°15'W0.20 Mile40 Yards000K0Fisher
11.81994-05-12232°47'N / 100°36'W2.00 Miles75 Yards00500K0Fisher
11.91962-06-07232°54'N / 100°32'W32°52'N / 100°30'W3.60 Miles200 Yards000K0Fisher
15.31968-05-24332°38'N / 100°36'W32°38'N / 100°40'W4.10 Miles67 Yards0025K0Scurry
17.71968-05-24332°38'N / 100°42'W32°39'N / 100°40'W2.70 Miles100 Yards0025K0Scurry
18.51991-05-02232°53'N / 100°08'W0.20 Mile10 Yards0025K0Jones
18.91986-04-19332°27'N / 100°26'W32°29'N / 100°21'W4.50 Miles600 Yards110025.0M0Nolan
19.01973-03-23232°28'N / 100°24'W32°28'N / 100°21'W3.30 Miles300 Yards00250K0Nolan
20.71963-04-26232°44'N / 100°55'W32°48'N / 100°36'W19.00 Miles67 Yards000K0Scurry
22.41968-05-24332°38'N / 100°46'W2.00 Miles67 Yards0025K0Scurry
23.11982-05-27232°26'N / 100°41'W32°28'N / 100°31'W5.00 Miles30 Yards00250K0Nolan
24.31990-05-14232°50'N / 100°00'W0.20 Mile10 Yards030K0Jones
24.51985-04-28232°36'N / 100°01'W3.50 Miles400 Yards0025K0Jones
25.01961-03-16232°24'N / 100°27'W32°24'N / 100°04'W22.40 Miles100 Yards003K0Taylor
25.41990-05-14232°53'N / 100°00'W0.20 Mile10 Yards020K0Jones
25.71962-05-25332°50'N / 100°00'W32°53'N / 99°58'W4.10 Miles67 Yards1125K0Jones
26.11990-05-14232°56'N / 100°01'W2.00 Miles100 Yards02250K0Jones
28.11982-05-27232°25'N / 100°44'W32°26'N / 100°41'W3.00 Miles30 Yards00250K0Mitchell
29.41989-05-13232°35'N / 99°56'W1.50 Miles150 Yards000K0Jones
30.91982-05-30233°00'N / 99°58'W32°57'N / 99°56'W3.00 Miles100 Yards00250K0Haskell
31.21990-04-05232°35'N / 99°54'W0.20 Mile10 Yards000K0Jones
31.51982-05-30232°57'N / 99°56'W32°56'N / 99°54'W2.00 Miles100 Yards00250K0Jones
31.71990-05-14332°53'N / 99°53'W0.20 Mile10 Yards020K0Jones
35.91978-07-03232°29'N / 99°52'W0.10 Mile50 Yards00250K0Taylor
37.82005-06-12233°15'N / 100°39'W33°14'N / 100°41'W2.00 Miles1200 Yards00150K15KKent
 Brief Description: The National Weather Service in Lubbock, TX conducted a damage survey in Kent County, approximately 8 miles to the northeast of Clairemont. In collaboration with the Center for Severe Weather Research in Boulder, CO and Texas Tech University meteorologists assessing the tornadoes across the county with Doppler-On-Wheels (DOW) data, a better understanding of the wind fields and tornado timing was achieved. The area of assessed damage was bounded by a triangle comprised of FM2320 to the south, FM1228 to the east, and CR112 to the west. There was a damage path characterized by tree damage across the zone. The path of the damage was oriented from a northeast-east to southwest-west direction. DOW data confirmed the large, wedge tornado initially propagated to the east and northeast, became nearly stationary, then rotate southward around the west side of the parent mesocyclone. The tornado moved to the southwest, then south and crossed FM1228 from the north/northeast to the south/southwest. The path of the tornado was between 0.6 to 0.7 miles wide. In assessing the damage, a circulatory patter was evident in a wheat field owned by a private farmer, with all of the wheat laying down to the south. Along this quadrant of the circulation, large farm equipment (tractors and cotton trailers) were tossed and mangled. An 80,000 lb box car was shaken by the tornado and the associated strong wind but was not moved from its location, however the contents inside were disturbed. The farm vehicles were tossed briefly a few times as there were scar marks and impact marks in the field as the equipment was blown to the south. The front-end of one tractor was snapped off after the second impact with the ground, as the vehicle was likely too heavy to remain airborne and was dragged and rolled by the tornadic wind and circulation. On the east side of the circulation, there were tree branches not grown in that immediate area that were stripped clean of bark. A cotton trailer (lighter than the other equipment) was lifted from its original location and was tossed to the north and mangled upon impact. The equipment was tossed approximately 3/10 of a mile within the circulation. It was evident from the damage pattern and debris, the circulation was multi-vortex in nature. The DOW measured wind speeds ranging from 45, 65 and 90 meters per second at various stages of the tornado life cycle at heights between 3 and 50 meters above ground level.
38.51955-04-05232°56'N / 99°48'W32°57'N / 99°46'W2.70 Miles67 Yards03250K0Jones
38.71982-05-27232°10'N / 100°52'W32°25'N / 100°44'W15.00 Miles30 Yards00250K0Mitchell
41.32009-06-13233°12'N / 99°57'W33°10'N / 99°54'W4.00 Miles440 Yards001.0M0KHaskell
 Brief Description: EVENT NARRATIVE: A National Weather Service survey team found a quarter mile wide EF2 tornado that tore the roof off of four homes and desroyed several outbuildings, irrigation sprinklers, and power poles. EPISODE NARRATIVE: On June 13, thunderstorms developed along an outflow boundary across Northwest Texas. A supercell thunderstorm moved southeast across Haskell County and produced a strong tornado. There was significant damage near Rule. Also, large hail and widespread 60 to 70 mph winds were reported with this severe storm.
41.42004-06-11232°10'N / 100°44'W32°12'N / 100°36'W10.30 Miles200 Yards03250K0Mitchell
 Brief Description: A National Weather Service damage survey team concluded that a significant tornado struck rural areas of southeastern Mitchell County during the evening of the 11th. The team examined a damage path marked by shredded vegetation (mostly mesquite trees), downed utility poles, agricultural fences, and a complex of destroyed mobile homes that extended over ten miles in a continuous horseshoe shaped path that crossed State Route 208 twenty miles south-southeast of Colorado City. The tornado developed seventeen miles south-southeast of Colorado City around 2028 CST. Damage indicates the tornado's motion was initially toward the southeast then east as it crossed the heavily traveled State Route 208. Two Texas Tech University students traveling north on 208 (south of the tornado's path) watched as a Ford Expedition drove into the tornadic circulation. The large sports utility vehicle was blown 100 yards off of the highway. Evidence supports the vehicle was rolled a considerable distance by the tornadic winds, but it is unclear whether it became airborne. Three motorists were transferred to local hospitals. One person sustained serious injuries that included a broken back. A detailed damage path analysis and corresponding radar data suggest that the tornado then tracked very slowly east a few miles before curving to the northeast. Similar curved damage paths (turning left of the tornado's original motion) are commonly observed when well-developed tornadoes enter the dissipation stage. The tornado proved to remain very dangerous, however, as eight mobile homes were destroyed by the tornado near the end of its life cycle twenty miles southeast of Colorado City. The light weight and unanchored structures were blown over and shredded by the dissipation stage tornadic winds. The trailers were arranged in a complex and were used to provide shelter for groups of hunters that frequent the ranch property. They were not occupied when the tornado struck. In summary, a significant round of severe thunderstorms affected parts of west Texas during the afternoon and evening of the 11th. At least two supercell storms produced giant hail and one strong tornado over the region. A supercell thunderstorm tracked across Terrell County in the west Texas Lower Trans Pecos region during the late afternoon hours. Multiple reports of large hail including two different instances of tennis ball sized stones were received as this storm tracked east along U.S. Highway 90 between Sanderson and Dryden. A second area of convection erupted over the eastern Permian Basin by late afternoon and continued into the evening hours. A severe storm associated with this activity produced half-dollar size hail in the Westbrook community. An isolated classic supercell evolved from this complex of storms and took on a distinctly deviant southeastward storm motion. This storm took on radar characteristics consistent with a classic tornadic supercell. Hail up to the size of golfballs was observed southeast of Colorado City as the storm evolved into its tornadic phase. A long-lived significant tornado tracked across mainly rural areas of Mitchell County just after sunset. The tornado resulted in three injuries when it crossed State Route 208 and blew a vehicle off of the highway. Severe rear flank downdraft winds also resulted in widespread wind damage south of the tornado's path.
41.51991-04-24233°18'N / 100°45'W33°18'N / 100°35'W12.10 Miles350 Yards0025K0Kent
41.71969-05-06232°37'N / 99°42'W0.10 Mile50 Yards003K0Jones
42.41965-05-15332°27'N / 99°44'W32°35'N / 99°43'W9.30 Miles100 Yards02250K0Jones
42.61962-04-26232°52'N / 99°43'W32°55'N / 99°40'W4.70 Miles440 Yards0025K0Jones
43.21957-08-12232°35'N / 99°41'W0.50 Mile7 Yards003K0Jones
43.51985-04-28232°08'N / 100°07'W32°11'N / 100°07'W2.50 Miles300 Yards10250K0Taylor
43.81990-04-05232°27'N / 99°44'W0.20 Mile10 Yards000K0Taylor
43.91965-05-25232°09'N / 100°41'W2.00 Miles200 Yards01250K0Mitchell
45.11976-05-25332°34'N / 99°41'W32°30'N / 99°39'W5.20 Miles300 Yards002.5M0Jones
45.51985-04-28232°07'N / 100°08'W32°08'N / 100°07'W1.50 Miles300 Yards00250K0Nolan
45.81969-06-19232°47'N / 99°37'W0.10 Mile10 Yards0025K0Jones
46.41976-05-26332°31'N / 99°39'W1.00 Mile300 Yards00250K0Jones
47.21962-05-26233°10'N / 99°46'W1.00 Mile67 Yards000K0Haskell
47.21969-06-12232°04'N / 100°16'W0.50 Mile50 Yards0025K0Coke
47.31973-03-10232°20'N / 99°45'W0125K0Taylor
47.81955-04-05232°57'N / 99°46'W32°59'N / 99°29'W16.60 Miles67 Yards00250K0Haskell
48.01963-04-05233°09'N / 99°44'W1.00 Mile33 Yards003K0Haskell
48.91976-05-25332°30'N / 99°39'W32°29'N / 99°35'W4.30 Miles300 Yards012.5M0Taylor
49.01991-04-24333°09'N / 99°46'W33°12'N / 99°42'W3.50 Miles200 Yards01250K0Haskell


* The information on this page is based on the global volcano database, the U.S. earthquake database of 1638-1985, and the U.S. Tornado and Weather Extremes database of 1950-2010.


 
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