Wyoming Tornadoes on
June 3 1958

A special case study

Jonathan D. Finch

Historical Tornado Cases for the Boulder Warning Area

Historical Tornado Cases for the Cheyenne Warning Area

Historical Tornado Cases for the United States

April 23  1960 Cheyenne Ridge Tornado

The July 16  1979 Cheyenne Tornado

May 7-8  1965 Front Range Tornado

June 14-17  1965 Front Range Superstorm

High plains and front range topo maps



Overview


                                        There were only 3 reports of severe weather on June 3, 1958. Two tornadoes were reported in Wyoming and
                                        there was 1 rerport of 3/4" hail in Idaho. Both tornadoes were in open country and did no damage. One tornado
                                        occurred 7 miles east of Gilette at 530 pm and the other was just west of the Bighorn mountains near Shell at
                                        330 pm. But June 3 1958 featured a classic severe weather pattern for eastern and northeast Wyoming.
                                        The author believes that a lot more severe weather occurred than was reported on this day.



The northeast Wyoming severe weather hole

                                       

                                        From January 1955 to December 1973, there was a large area in northeast Wyoming with no large hail reports
                                        greater than or equal to 1". This area is greater than 6000 sq mi and contains the town of Wright and the tiny town
                                        of Bill. During this period, severe weather reports were not sought after. Occasionally someone would report this event
                                        by telephone.  With almost nothing to hit over such a large area, significant tornadoes are very rare in this area.
                                        On rare occasions, a small town takes a direct hit with a strong tornado. This was certainly the case on August
                                        15, 2004 when 2 people were killed in Wright. Undoubtedly, tornadoes of this magnitude or even stronger have
                                        occurred and hit nothing (rated F0).  The town of Bill is pretty  much a ghosttown with a population of only 76.
                                     

                                        One undocumented hailstorm and tornado that occurred in this severe weather hole occurred in June 15, 1965.
                                        about 40 miles north of Douglas. This tornado barely missed the farm house but destroyed 2 trailer houses. A man
                                        inside of the trailers suffered 2 broken ribs. Thousands of valuable trees were destroyed by the tornado, some
                                        of which were giant trees that stood for long time. Giant masses of uprooted and broken, giant trees were all that
                                        remained. This event was documented in the Douglas Budget but never made it into the official storm databases.
                                        I stumbled across this event after going through one year of newspaper microfilm.

                                        The event I would like to discuss occurred on June 3 1958. All the ingredients came together for high-end severe
                                        weather on this day. But officially, not much happened on this day!!




Meteorological Discussion


                                        At 12 UTC June 3 1958, a strong upper jet was located from southern California into Utah and Wyoming. The
                                        exact speeds in this jet are unknown since many of the soundings were missing at upper levels. But 80 to 100kt
                                        winds were probably common. A deep 500mb low (about 558 dm) was located over northern CA with southwest
                                        flow across the Rockies. A  500mb ridge was centered over Missouri and eastern Kansas. The 500mb wind
                                        was missing at Grand Junction. However their 550mb wind was 52 kts. Ahead of a pacific
                                        cold front, a mid level warm plume covered much of eastern Arizona, eastern Utah, New Mexico, Colorado and
                                        probably southern Wyoming as shown on this 700mb chart. Ahead of the 700mb baroclinic zone in the warm
                                        sector, 500mb temperatures were chilly by early June standards with -13C at Grand Junction. 850mb dewpoints
                                        were quite high at North Platte and Omaha. There was an 850mb front between North Platte and Rapid City.

                                        The 21 UTC surface chart showed a pacific cold front charging into western Wyoming. The progression of this
                                        front was pinpointed using surface observations from Provo, Salt Lake City and Evanston. A warm front was located
                                        north of  Riverton, Casper, Cheyenne, North Platte and Norfolk, but south of Sidney and Douglas. A dryline was
                                        buldging east of Imperial in southwest Nebraska, and a front extending from northern Wyoming into North Dakota.
                                        The warm front moved only stopped advancing after 21 UTC and remained just southwest of Douglas. North of the
                                        front in the Nebraska panhandle, moisture was surging to the west-west-northwest into eastern Wyoming as shown
                                        in the surface observations at Chadron and Scottsbluff.

                                        The surface observations at Worland indicate CB W-N at 20 UTC, CB NW at 21 UTC and CB N-E at 22 UTC.
                                        The weather observer at Greybull observed a tornado to the southeast at 2155 UTC. This was probably the same
                                        tornado that occurred near Shell at 2200 UTC. There was apparently no damage with this tornado. It is possible
                                        that this tornado was occurring southwest of Greybull as well. But this is wide open country with very few people.
                                        No hail was reported with this storm. There was a gap in the surface observations between 19 UTC and 2100 UTC.
                                        The surface wind up through 19 UTC was fairly light. Thunderstorm(s) apparently developed west or northwest of
                                        Worland around 20 UTC and then affected the Greybull and Shell areas around 22 UTC. The wind at Worland was
                                        light from the north from 20 to 22 UTC. The vertical wind shear profile was characterized by light winds or light
                                        northerlies at low levels, and fairly strong southwest mid to high level flow. It has been previoulsly documted by
                                        "" that northerly low level flow is favorable for getting moisture west of the Big Horns. The surface based CAPE
                                        was estimated using the 21 UTC surface observation from Worland and the 00 UTC sounding from Lander.
                                        The Lander sounding was immediately upstream from the storm location at is probably fairly representative of the
                                        mid and high levels over the storm area. Since the surface pressure was about 862 mb at Worland, I used a recent
                                        sounding from Grand Junction that corresponding had a surface pressure about 862mb since the elevation of Grand
                                        Junction and Worland are similar. The surface based CAPE approximation was 2600 j/kg.

                                        Storms were exploding north of Casper around the same time the storms were developing west of Worland. The
                                        surface remarks on the surface observation sheet from Casper showed "Rapidly Building CB NE" at 20 UTC,
                                        "CB NW-NNW HUGE CB NNE-NE at 21 UTC, CB NNE-NE at 22 UTC, CB NNE at 23 UTC, CB NNE at
                                        00 UTC, CB DSNT NNE at 01 UTC and CB DSNT NNE at 02 UTC.  Its is fairly obvious from a glimpse of the
                                        21 UTC surface chart that areas north of Douglas and N/NE of Casper were in prime locations for severe weather.

                                        Lets attempt to estimate the lifted index at Douglas, WY and northeast of Casper at 21 UTC. The surface
                                        observation at Casper shows completely mixed out conditions with T/TD of  85F/13F and wind of 21025KT. They
                                        just recently mixed out and winds are howling from the SW. The low levels are probably not strongly superadiabatic
                                        since the winds are so strong and since they just recently mixed out after the warm frontal passage. Given that the
                                        dewpoint depression is 72F, the temperature profile over casper at 21 UTC is probably dry adiabatic from the surface
                                        to 500mb. Let's lift a parcel from the surface to 700mb and then 500mb at 21 UTC to estimate the 700mb and 500mb
                                        temps. This gives 700mb and 500mb temperatures of 15C and -11.3C respectively.  The 21 UTC temperature of 85F
                                        at Casper also corresponds to a the maximum temperature -3 or MaxT-3. But when Casper initially mixed out at 20 UTC
                                        the surface temperature was 83F. Lifting 83F up the dry adiabat yields 14.6C and -11.9C.  To corroborate this finding, let's look
                                        immediately upstream at Rawlins and use the same procedure. The 19 UTC (local noon) temperature at Rawlins
                                        had leveled off at 75F. In fact the temperature was 75F at both 18 and 19 UTC. The temperature then  increased to
                                        77F at 20 UTC and then 79F by 21 UTC. The winds during this period were gusting from the southwest at 35 to 40KTS.
                                        Using the mixout temperture of 75F and taking this up the dry adiabat yields 700mb and 500mb temperatures of
                                        14.2C and -12.7C. Using Max-T -3 = 77F yields 14.8C and -12.1C.  The bottom line from this exercise is that the
                                        700mb and 500mb temperature at Casper and Rawlins during the afternoon was 14.2C-15C and -11.3C-12.7C
                                        Using an average of these values gives -14.6C at 700mb and -12C at 500mb. Using upper level data from surrounding
                                        raobs sites, the most probably thermal profile at Casper at 21 UTC looks something like this. Now let's construct a
                                        sounding for a location just northeast of Casper and estimate the surface based CAPE and lifted index. First, Lets
                                        assume that the theta-e at Douglas is representative of the area north of Douglas and northeast of Casper. This is
                                        probably a fair assumption since the winds were howling from the southeast at Douglas all afternoon. We will also
                                        assume that the air over Casper and Rawlins moved northeast and acted as a lid over the moist air to the northeast.
                                        The surface pressure at Douglas was 844mb at 21 UTC. This was calculated by looking at the 21 UTC station pressure for
                                        Douglas(24.95) and multiplying by 33.86. Since the surface T/TD at Douglas were 79/58 at 21 UTC, the mixing depth in the                                                     boundary layer was probably about 4000ft. The approximate sounding for the area around Douglas and northwest of
                                        Douglas shows about 4300 j/kg of surface based CAPE. Its is very  likely that the surface dewpoints to the northeast and
                                        north of Douglas were 1 to 2F higher while the potential temperatures were probably about 1 to 2F lower. Maximum
                                        temperatures from cooperative observer locations were 74F just southwest of Gillette and 75 to the southeast of Gillete.
                                        The maximum temperature at Moorcraft(4200ft) was 76F. Areas north of Douglas probably had dewpoints close to
                                        60F and surface temperatures in the mid 70sF in the afternoon. This would still result in surface based CAPE values
                                        around 4000j/kg.

                                        The vertical wind shear was excellent in the region north of Douglas. The 500mb, 400mb, 300mb and 200mb charts
                                        indicate speeds of 50kts, 60kts, 70kts and 80kts from about 220 degrees. Since the surface winds were gusting to
                                        between 33 and 40kts and sustained at 25kts, the 700mb winds were probably from the southwest at 35kts.
                                        The surface winds were from the southeast to south-southeast at 15 to 20kts.

                                        Two tornadoes were observed about 7 miles east of Gillete around 530 pm MST (2330 UTC). Storms developing
                                        about 20 miles north of Casper would take about 2.5 hours to move as far northeast as the tornado location by 2330 UTC
                                        assuming a storm motion of 30 mph. So the storm that produced the tornado east of Gillete at 2330 UTC probably
                                        developed north of Casper around 230 pm MST (2130 UTC). This makes sense recalling the remarks of HUGE CB
                                        NE-NNE on the Casper surface observation sheet at 21 UTC.

                                        I believe that the storms in northeast Wyoming produced a lot of severe weather between 21 UTC and 01 UTC.
                                        Given the very favorable environment, very large hail undoubtedly occurred despite the lack of reports. There also
                                        may have been more tornadoes in the wide open areas to the north of Douglas and northeast of Casper.
                      


Upper air charts:

7-15-79  00 UTC    700    500    250

7-15-79  12 UTC    700    500    250

7-16-79  00 UTC    850    700    500    400    300    250    200

7-16-79  12 UTC    850    700    500    400    300    250    200

7-17-79  00 UTC    850    700    500    400    300    250    200


Surface charts   21 UTC 14    06 UTC 15    09 UTC 15    12 UTC 15    15 UTC 15    18 UTC 15    21 UTC 15    00 UTC 16
                        03 UTC 16    06 UTC 16    09 UTC 16    12 UTC 16    16 UTC 16    17 UTC 16    18 UTC 16    19 UTC 16                   
                        20 UTC 16    21 UTC 16    22 UTC 16