ICE STORM 1997
Mark David Roth*
National Weather Service
Lake Charles, LA
About the Lake Charles County Warning Area (CWA)
Lake Charles is located in
extreme southwestern Louisiana, about 30 miles east of the Sabine River which
divides the states of Louisiana and Texas. Being at a latitude of 30 degrees
north and near the coast of the Gulf of Mexico, significant winter precipitation
events are uncommon along the coast, but become more common in central and
northern sections of the state. Extreme winter events such as blizzards are
virtually unknown to almost everyone in the area. This makes any accumulation of
snow, sleet, or freezing rain a major hazard, as snowplows and other de-icing
equipment are nowhere to be found throughout Louisiana and the public has little
experience with wintery situations.
Effects of the Ice Storm
A quarter inch of ice accumulated primarily on grassy and non-paved surfaces,
with an inch accumulating on higher, more exposed surfaces such as trees and
power lines. This storm left around 3/4 of the area between Beaumont, TX and
Lake Charles, LA powerless. Power outages were noted at far west as Houston and
Galveston, in some cases for as many as 5 days.
Synoptic Situation
The first few days of January were uncharacteristically
warm, due to a warm subtropical airmass dominating the area. On the 5th, and
arctic front surged through the Lake Charles CWA, leading to a period of below
normal temperatures and a cold rain on the 7th and 8th. This caused soil and
surface temperatures during the period to quickly cool down into the 40s (around
7 degrees C).
Meanwhile, a second blast of arctic air moved south from Canada, passing
through the forecast area during the afternoon of the 10th. As the cold front
sagged south to a Brownsville/ Miami line, a surface low began to form along the
then stationary front east of the city of Brownsville, which eventually led to a
stationary overrunning situation across the region.
The forecast models, beginning with the MRF on the 7th and ending with the
ETA on the 11th (which was much too dry, even during the frozen rain) hinted at
a frozen precipitation event sometime between the 11th and 13th. Forecaster
concern about a possible ice storm started to be addressed early on the 9th on
area forecast discussions (AFDs) from Lake Charles and Slidell and became a near
certainty by the 10th.
Around midnight on the 12th, a narrow streak of snow formed near Port Arthur
and moved east-northeast near 60 mph across the area, being moved at such high
rate of speed by the winds at mid levels of the atmosphere (500-700 hPa). Lake
Charles reported snow between midnight and 2 am.
By early morning on the 12th, a large area of freezing rain and sleet filled
in much of Southeast Texas, from College Station east and southward. This was in
response to a 700 hPa shortwave moving east across Central Texas and to the
normal diurnal development of precipitation induced by cooling aloft during
predawn hours in cloudy situations. The leading edge of the freezing rain and
sleet reached Lake Charles by 9 am and the frozen precipitation continued
through the evening of the 13th before finally ending after the final in a
series of several shortwaves passed by.
The antecedent conditions leading up to this event on the sounding from the
morning of the 11th were a fairly strong temperature inversion just above 900
hPa (39 degrees F/4 degrees C) and a precipitable water of only 0.31" (8 mm).
When the precipitation finally developed, the sounding "wet bulbed" below 700
hPa to around freezing, causing the initial snow flurries around midnight.
As the inversion continued to warm during the morning of the 11th, sleet was
briefly the dominant form of precipitation before changing to freezing rain
later in the day. The initial sleet dropped the temperature instantly to
freezing; temperatures during the event never fell below 30 degrees at Lake
Charles (-1 degrees C) and 27 degrees at Alexandria (-3 degrees C), nor did they
rise above 32 degrees (0 degrees C).
On the 13th, it was apparent even at the automated sites that significant ice
accumulations were present. Wind gages at Galveston, Houston, Sea Rim State
Park, Beaumont, and Lake Charles reported calm winds, despite northeast winds at
15 mph! Technicians had to run across the runway and chip ice off the Lake
Charles anemometer. The following are a couple pictures taken around the office
during the storm- click for a larger image.
Ice remained a fixture across the region until the afternoon of the 14th when
temperatures finally rose well above freezing (into the upper 40s F/9 degrees
C), when chards of ice fell out of trees, antennae, the Doppler radar (WSR 88D)
and large buildings throughout the afternoon hours. More tree limbs fell and
additional power outages were reported. This made movement across the region
dangerous and potentially life threatening near the larger structures. Crashes
were heard outside the weather office as sheets of ice fell off the Doppler
radar!
It took weeks to remove all the downed tree limbs that fell during the ice
storm. In fact, for the next few months afterward, the office had to be careful
about reports from the public about falling branches during thunderstorms
possibly triggering severe thunderstorm warnings and altering the area's severe
weather climatology!
Another unexpected side effect of the Ice Storm has occurred as of late: an
areawide baby boom! Admissions at local hospitals have been 150% normal during
August, September, and October of 1997. One expectant mother was quoted by The
Lake Charles American Press newspaper on October 11th as saying "everywhere I
looked, there was a pregnant woman."
Several million dollars of damage occurred across the area due to the Ice
Storm. Much experience was gained by those on duty at the weather office during
the event and by residents of the region about how disruptive an ice storm can
be.
Author's Current Affiliation:
* NWS's National Centers for Environmental Prediction -
Hydrometeorological Prediction Center, Camp Springs MD
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