src paper: https://t.co/cp1ug90S3c https://t.co/QJPlvhbJEr
20 years ago, vast #bushfires razed Canberra's suburbs—and #bushfire science was never the same @ConversationEDU https://t.co/LgwzMyyeEP https://t.co/Fuf8iBlqiJ
@chrispydog Indeed. I’m guessing authors excluded pyro-tornado genesis.. https://t.co/5hjZrtrdZb https://t.co/kdDA70N6Fp
@TohidiAli @wildfiretoday Although it's clearly not what is happening in that Colorado River case, they do exist. E.g. https://t.co/0LsdOVUfcc and https://t.co/xrMn9r4zbG
@bhensonweather @puravidawx @wxbunkers Not sure if its happened in the US - but in Australia the Canberra Bushfires in 2003 included a pyroCb that propagated off on its own as a supercell, and produced an F2 tornado - the first documented such event. https
The severe t-storm generated by a wildfire in Texas yesterday piqued my interest and I did a little more digging--it turns out there is a documented instance of a tornado spawned by a pyrocumulus, in Australia in 2003 https://t.co/GQ8hg3eDLG https://t.co/x
@Owen_Weatherman @stormchaserQ @NWSAmarillo It’s happened before! https://t.co/GlNKpsS15I
RT @Unknown_Brother: В 2003 в Австралии при лесных пожарах образовалось пирокуммулятивное облако, которое переросло в огненное торнадо http…
В 2003 в Австралии при лесных пожарах образовалось пирокуммулятивное облако, которое переросло в огненное торнадо https://t.co/9yxv5mFuvK
@fyfluiddynamics This is actually a fire whirl, not a fire tornado. Genuine fire tornadoes do occur though, e.g http://t.co/s5K5Jruq8j
@lunaitesrock @LiveScience @uni_iceland No clue for volcano vortices, but fire tornadoes can be F2 equivalent (ref) http://t.co/EoC7a72H2n