The tornado scientist Seeing inside severe storms

Mary Kay Carson

Book - 2019

"What if tornadoes could be stopped or slowed down? In this addition to the critically-acclaimed Scientist in the Field series, scientist Robin Tanamachi and her team are trying to come up with a way to predict tornadoes with even greater accuracy, and save countless lives across America's heartland."--

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Children's Room j551.553/Carson Due May 10, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Instructional and educational works
Published
Boston : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Mary Kay Carson (author)
Other Authors
Tom Uhlman (illustrator)
Physical Description
75 pages : color illustrations, color maps ; 24 x 29 cm
Audience
Ages 10-12.
Grades 4 to 6.
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 70-71) and index.
ISBN
9780544965829
  • A southern twist
  • Storm chaser genesis
  • Twister science 2.0
  • Scanning the skies
  • A tragic year
  • Setting a tornado net
  • Future forecasts
  • Words (and acronyms) to know.
Review by Booklist Review

Whenever there is a threat of tornadoes, many people glue themselves to the Weather Channel watching storm chasers. Such was Robin Tanamachi's experience at age seven, which prompted her, right then, to become a meteorologist and tornado scientist, and she never wavered from that career path. This book follows Tanamachi as she describes her work and the science behind it; her work with the National Severe Storms Laboratory's VORTEX, VORTEX2, and VORTEX-SE projects has been crucial to unraveling how storms develop. In their photobiography of Tanamachi, Carson and Uhlman present much more than her life: they explore and discuss tornado research and processes scientists use to understand the storms in their attempt to make weather situations safer for citizens. Uhlman's rich color photographs (along with some from Tanamachi's own collection) and Carson's eloquent text take readers into the chase truck with Tanamachi; her husband, Dan Dawson; and their colleagues. Diagrams, text boxes, explanations, detailed notes, and recommended resources make this addition to the Scientists in the Field series a rich addition to weather collections.--J. B. Petty Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Research meteorologist and radar expert Robin Tanamachi, who once studied tornadoes by chasing them across Midwestern plains, now lies in wait for them in the hills and forests of America's southeast.Writer Carson (Inside Tornados, 2010) and photographer Uhlman document the veteran storm chaser's work and her change of focus from storms in Tornado Alley (from the Dakotas down to Texas) to an area called Dixie Alley that stretches from Louisiana to Georgia and up to Tennessee and Alabama. Chapter by chapter, they introduce the scientist and the science, including the genesis of severe storms and tornado anatomy; explain the use of weather radar and other tools; recall the effects of a record-breaking number of highly destructive tornadoes in Tennessee and Alabama in 2011; show cooperating scientists gathered in Alabama to "set a tornado net"; and describe efforts to predict tornadoes further in advance and to ensure that people react appropriately to storm warnings. There is particular attention to Tanamachi's work with radar and husband Dan Dawson's measurement of the sizes and shapes of raindrops. Plenty of well-captioned photos (including pictures of disasters and of the scientist as a tornado-obsessed child) break up the exposition and will add to the appeal. Carson's description of the fourth-generation Japanese-American scientist's work is detailed and immediate; readers might well be able to imagine themselves in her shoes. (Dawson presents white.)For middle schoolers, challenging science about a perennially appealing but surprisingly complex subject. (glossary, research suggestions, acknowledgements, sources and bibliography, photo credits, index) (Nonfiction. 10-14) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.