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Thunderstorm Wind — Clinton, Pennsylvania

2025-03-16 · near Beech Creek, Clinton, Pennsylvania

$90K
Property damage
87 EG
Magnitude

Event narrative

An NWS Storm Survey confirmed that a downburst occurred on March 16, 2025 with maximum estimated winds of 100 mph northeast of Beech Creek. Damage began along Monument Orviston Road where several large trees fell onto a garage. Additional tree damage was observed along Laurel Run Road where multiple roofs were damaged. Extensive pine tree damage continued across Berry Road.

Wider weather episode

A cold front west of central Pennsylvania slowly began to drift eastward during the morning hours and throughout the day on March 16, 2025 allowing ample lift in an environment with sufficient shear and instability to form a quasi-linear convective system across western Pennsylvania. This QLCS continued moving into a more favorable environment across central Pennsylvania, with increased instability from a dry slot coupled with a favorable entrance region of an upper-level jet maximum to produce enhanced shear. This allowed for the QLCS to strengthen across central Pennsylvania and caused extensive damage across west-central Pennsylvania with ample low-level shear spawning two tornadoes in Clinton and Elk counties. Farther east, a less favorable environment was in place with more stable air and lower shear; however, the forward momentum of the QLCS allowed for further damage across northeastern Pennsylvania. Later in the evening, thunderstorms began to form south of central Pennsylvania and gradually drifted northeastward with upper-level support. Strong-to-severe thunderstorms were present along the Mason-Dixon line with a severe thunderstorm producing quarter and ping pong-sized hail in York County.

View location on OpenStreetMap → (41.0814, -77.6009)


Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 1238235. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.