2000 Fort Worth tornado outbreak

2000 Fort Worth tornado outbreak
Elevated image showing various buildings in the foreground and middleground with various degrees of broken windows
Aerial view of damaged skyscrapers in downtown Fort Worth
DurationMarch 28, 2000
Tornadoes
confirmed
10
Max. rating1F3[note 1] tornado
Fatalities2 fatalities (+1 non-tornadic), 80 injuries
Damage$450 million (2000 USD; $608 million 2016 USD)[4][5]
Areas affectedFort Worth, Texas, United States
Part of the tornadoes of 2000

1Most severe tornado damage; see Fujita scale

During the evening hours of March 28, 2000, a powerful F3 tornado struck Downtown Fort Worth, Texas, causing significant damage to numerous buildings and skyscrapers as well as two deaths. The tornado was part of a larger severe weather outbreak that caused widespread storms across Texas and Oklahoma in late-March, spurred primarily by the moist and unstable atmospheric environment over the South Central United States as a result of an eastward-moving upper-level low and shortwave trough. The tornado outbreak was well forecast by both computer forecast models and the National Weather Service, though the eventual focal point for the severe weather—North Texas—only came into focus on March 28 as the conditions favorable for tornadic development quickly took hold.

The F3 Fort Worth tornado initially began as a relatively weak tornado in River Oaks, gradually strengthening as it tracked southeastward and then eastward towards Fort Worth's central business district. The twister damaged 266 homes across its 4 mi (6.4 km) long and 250 yd (230 m) wide path, out of which 28 were destroyed. Damage surveys indicated that much of the tornado's destruction was due to structural deficiencies in many of the older subdivisions impacted by the tornado. Various high-rise and low-rise buildings in downtown Fort Worth sustained various degrees of structural damage including numerous broken windows. Nine other tornadoes also occurred across North Texas on March 28; although most were relatively inconsequential, another strong F3 tornado struck portions of Arlington, including Arlington Municipal Airport. Aside from the two deaths caused by the tornado, a third person was killed in north Fort Worth by a fall of baseball-sized hail.

  1. ^ a b c Edwards, Roger (February 13, 2017). "Fujita Tornado Damage Scale". The Online Tornado FAQ. Norman, Oklahoma: Storm Prediction Center. Retrieved March 8, 2017.
  2. ^ National Weather Service Fort Worth, Texas. "Tornado Event Report for F3 Tornado in Tarrant County, Texas on March 28, 2000". Storm Events Database. Fort Worth, Texas: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Centers for Environmantal Information. Retrieved March 7, 2017.
  3. ^ Marshall, Timothy P.; Foster, Michael (January 2002). "Damage Survey and Radar Analysis of the Fort Worth and Arlington, TX Tornadoes on 28 March 2000" (PDF). Dallas, Texas. Retrieved March 7, 2017.
  4. ^ Young, Michael E. (March 2010). "Fort Worth tornado's devastation 10 years ago changed the face of downtown". DallasNews. Fort Worth, Texas: The Dallas Morning News Inc. The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved March 7, 2017.
  5. ^ "Costliest Texas Storms". Insurance Council of Texas. Retrieved March 7, 2017.


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