Now that we are well into tornado season in North America, I thought I’d dredge this old 2007 post up out of the cobwebs in the dungeon. As Uncle Al pointed out in the comments, Middle Easterners did have dust devils so a vortex of wind was not unknown there. These, however, are no match for a full-blown F4 tornado.
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One has to wonder what the original inhabitants of North America thought of the tornado (how do you say “WTF” in Lakota?). Without a doubt, Native Americans were visited by tornadoes. The experience must have certainly left an impression. It would be interesting to hear any stories that may be out there. This topic has been the subject of scholarly study.
Little record of native American lore remains regarding their experiences with the tornado.
“The Cheyenne language has several words for tornadoes and their related storms: hevovetaso (tornado), ma’xehevovetaso (big whirlwind), ehohaatamano’e (threatening weather). For the Cheyenne, the tornado is not some kind of evil predatory force or a random assault from a blind and dumb atmospheric soup with no concern for human life. A tornado has a job, Yellowman told me, and that is to restore balance to the environment. The tornado speaks to the native people, in their respective tribal languages, in a voice that sounds like fire. Before it reaches the tribal land, the tornado tells the elders how big it’s going to be, not in the technical language of the EF scale but in colloquial terms: small, medium, big, huge.“
From the Tapistry Institite and links within.
North America is geographically privileged in that there is the possibility that overland southerly flows of cold dry air from the north can readily contact flows of warm moist air from the Pacific, Gulf of Mexico, or the Atlantic. Vertical mixing of unstable humid air results in convection cells that are further driven by the latent heat of condensation. These humid flows are spun up by the Coriolis effect and wind shear to afford monster anvil storm cells that can tower to 50,000 ft or higher.
Like many places, here in Colorado we often see isolated storm cells in the early evenings of summer, red in color at low altitude changing to a billowy yellow-white at altitude near sunset. Very often you can see mammatocumulous features signifying violent mixing activity. It’s no place for an airplane.

A murus, or wall cloud forms at the bottom interface where cold, water-saturated downdraft air is pulled into the adjacent column of rising air. The moisture condenses quickly and at low altitude to form the wall cloud. On occasion a tornado will drop out of a wall cloud.

It is interesting to speculate as to how our modern mythologies and iconographies might have been different if the tornado phenomenon had been common in the Mediterranean and the middle east. Would Charleton Heston have summoned a tornado to smite Yule Brynner’s Egyptians rather than parting the Red Sea and drowning the buggers? Perhaps the Pharaohs might have built great stone helices rather than obelisks. Aristotle might have written a treatise on the handedness of helical flows or whether the air flowed radially into or out of a tornado.
If the tornado had been a common phenomenon in the middle east during the iron age would the “Big Three” Abrahamic religions today feature tornadic themes in their texts and monuments? If so, perhaps the great cathedrals of Europe might today have relief sculptures or stained glass windows portraying the Israelites or Philistines being driven hither and thither by the swirling wrath of the Almighty’s cyclone.
Well, that’s enough of that.


July 14, 2007 at 7:40 am
Uncle Al
Convection swirls in Middle East deserts are djinns (genies). They were borrowed by the Old Testament re Moses’ pillar of smoke by day, pillar of fire by night (tribocharging and dry lightning). The distance from Cairo to Jerusalem is 264 miles. Assume 4 marching days/week (sabbath, holidays) and 5 hours/day march. Leap days are also holidays.
(40 yrs)(52 wks/yr)(4 d/wk)(5 hr/d) = 41,600 hrs
(264 mi)/(41,600 hrs) = 0.00635 mph
The Jews averaged 6.7 inches/minute following God in the desert. You cannot walk that slowly. Or, they randomly wandered all over Hell and tarnation following jinns. Test of faith!
(41,600 hrs)(1 mph)/(24,901.45 mi) = 1 2/3 times around the Earth’s equator. Try walking 1.5 feet/second.
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