Spatiotemporal Analyses of Lightning and Tornado Exposure to Large Outdoor Gatherings in the Conterminous United States

Stephen M. Strader 1 Villanova University, Department of Geography and the Environment, Villanova, Pennsylvania

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Jack H. Deppman 1 Villanova University, Department of Geography and the Environment, Villanova, Pennsylvania

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Abstract

Lightning and tornadoes kill more than 100 people per year on average throughout the United States. This study examines potential human exposure to lightning and tornadoes for United States large outdoor public gathering (LOG) events such as amusement parks, concerts, festivals, and sporting events. Specifically, LOG event attributes such as location, event date, number of events throughout the year, and maximum venue capacity are combined with climatological estimates of lightning and tornado activity to estimate potential worst-case LOG attendee exposure for 477 LOG venues across 16,232 individual LOG events throughout the year. Analyses permitted the creation of monthly LOG lightning (LOGLT) and tornado (LOGEF0+ and LOGEF2+) risk indices that denote potential lightning and tornado exposure for the LOG events assessed in this study. Findings reveal that amusement parks, Major League Baseball (MLB) games, and state fairs during warm season months (i.e., March through August) have the greatest potential exposure to lightning and tornadoes compared to all other LOG events. The New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival during May ranks highest in terms of potential lightning exposure, while Coors Field in Denver, CO (June) and Six Flags Over Texas in Arlington (April) encompass the greatest potential exposure to all (EF0+) and significant (EF2+) tornadoes. Based on these findings, LOG venue operators and governing bodies should continue to develop risk reduction strategies aimed at improving lightning and tornado safety, especially as lightning and tornado hazard threats evolve over time and across geographic space.

© 2025 American Meteorological Society. This is an Author Accepted Manuscript distributed under the terms of the default AMS reuse license. For information regarding reuse and general copyright information, consult the AMS Copyright Policy (www.ametsoc.org/PUBSReuseLicenses).

Corresponding author address: Stephen M. Strader, Department of Geography and the Environment, Villanova University, 800 E. Lancaster Ave., Villanova, PA 19085, E-mail: stephen.strader@villanova.edu

Abstract

Lightning and tornadoes kill more than 100 people per year on average throughout the United States. This study examines potential human exposure to lightning and tornadoes for United States large outdoor public gathering (LOG) events such as amusement parks, concerts, festivals, and sporting events. Specifically, LOG event attributes such as location, event date, number of events throughout the year, and maximum venue capacity are combined with climatological estimates of lightning and tornado activity to estimate potential worst-case LOG attendee exposure for 477 LOG venues across 16,232 individual LOG events throughout the year. Analyses permitted the creation of monthly LOG lightning (LOGLT) and tornado (LOGEF0+ and LOGEF2+) risk indices that denote potential lightning and tornado exposure for the LOG events assessed in this study. Findings reveal that amusement parks, Major League Baseball (MLB) games, and state fairs during warm season months (i.e., March through August) have the greatest potential exposure to lightning and tornadoes compared to all other LOG events. The New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival during May ranks highest in terms of potential lightning exposure, while Coors Field in Denver, CO (June) and Six Flags Over Texas in Arlington (April) encompass the greatest potential exposure to all (EF0+) and significant (EF2+) tornadoes. Based on these findings, LOG venue operators and governing bodies should continue to develop risk reduction strategies aimed at improving lightning and tornado safety, especially as lightning and tornado hazard threats evolve over time and across geographic space.

© 2025 American Meteorological Society. This is an Author Accepted Manuscript distributed under the terms of the default AMS reuse license. For information regarding reuse and general copyright information, consult the AMS Copyright Policy (www.ametsoc.org/PUBSReuseLicenses).

Corresponding author address: Stephen M. Strader, Department of Geography and the Environment, Villanova University, 800 E. Lancaster Ave., Villanova, PA 19085, E-mail: stephen.strader@villanova.edu
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