Giant Dust Devil Turns Tuesday Into 'Windsday' At Rice Research Center

 

 

 Image showing scale of dust devil at the NE Rice Research and Extension Center in Greenfield, Arkansas. Taken Oct. 11, 2022.

 Image courtesy Matt Conatser

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

MARY HIGHTOWER

GREENFIELD, ARKANSAS

   Tuesday was a real whirlwind of a day for Tim Burcham. Burcham, director of the Northeast Rice Research and Extension Center in Poinsett County, and Wyatt Luebke, assistant farm manager, were headed to the field in a side-by-side utility vehicle when they were faced with an enormous dust devil.

   Burcham – arms raised and with a smile on his face – jumped from the vehicle and ran straight at the vortex. Luebke’s video of the event has been viewed thousands of times on Twitter.

   “How many times in your life do you get an opportunity to get that close to one of nature’s weather phenomena?” Burcham said on Wednesday, adding it was “really a cool feeling” to get that close.

   “I got pelted by some of the corn shucks in the whirlwind, but nothing painful. There were corn shucks at least 200-300 feet into the air,” he said. “This whirlwind was even more spectacular due to the extreme drought conditions at the farm which allowed it to pick up extensive amounts of soil as well as the corn shucks!”

   “Work on the station can be hot, dusty, and consume long hours,” Burcham said. “Anytime we get an opportunity to inject some safe levity, I believe it’s good for morale.”

   Matt Conatser, a program technician working at the station, also filmed the dust devil. His video shows the side-by-side in front of the swirl of dirt and debris, capturing its scale. Conatser’s video had more than 8,000 views by Thursday morning.

   While it’s not the first big dust devil he’s ever seen, “this one was the biggest for sure,” he said. “I rode my bike through another one when I was about 9 years old and it threw me around a little.”

   Tuesday’s “dust devil was just beautiful to watch,” Conatser said. “While it was quite powerful for a dust devil, it definitely wasn't dangerous. At the end of the video, you can hear it hit the shop building as it was dissipating, so it did pack a bit of a punch.

   “It was just fun to take a couple minutes to watch and enjoy,” he said.

   Conatser also captured the moment when Burcham made his run.

   “What I love about Tim is that he doesn't let an opportunity go to waste,” Conatser said. “He is there in the moment and ready to engage!”

   How dust devils form

   Pat Walker, meteorologist for KARK-TV in Little Rock, said dust devils occur on warm, sunny days.

   “When there is such a significant difference in temperature between the surface and air a few hundred or even a thousand feet up, the air from the surface rises very quickly into the cooler air above,” he said. “We call these pockets of rising air ‘thermals.’

   They’re most likely to occur between noon and 4 p.m., when the ground’s surface is warmest.

   “When the warm air lifts and vacates the surface, something has to replace it – vacuums aren’t allowed in our atmosphere,” Walker said. “Cooler air rushes in from all directions.”

   With so much air rushing in, “there’s not room enough for all of it,” he said. “So, it has to come in, in a swirling motion – hence, the dust devil.”

   Walker said that once the thermal has lifted sufficiently to balance the temperature difference between the surface and air aloft, “the vertical motion stops … and the dust devil dies off.”

   Dust devil winds can reach 60 miles per hour or greater, but rarely cause damage, according to the National Weather Service.

   The Northeast Rice Research and Extension Center is part of the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station, the research arm of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture. ∆

   MARY HIGHTOWER: University of Arkansas

 

 

 

 

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