Dust Devils Are Similar To Tornadoes
When I found out we were moving to Nevada, I looked into the weather here out of curiosity, and found out that they do not have "traditional" tornadoes here, instead they have "dust devils" or whirlwinds comprised of wind and dust. Oh great. Maybe I'll get picked up off the ground by one of these things and say " Toto, we're not in Nevada any more" and maybe I'll see a tin man and a scarecrow... and is that a WIZARD behind that curtain? Ok, so I have too active of an imagination, I'm the first to admit it.Instead, my husband and I were waiting at a stoplight on a Las Vegas street one VERY hot day last summer, and all of a sudden we were surrounded by this WIND, very windy, but it didn't last too long... my husband being quick on the automatic windows closed them pretty quickly, and by the time this wind stopped, the car was almost covered in various debris! Pieces of leaves and dirt and sand and who knows what else that it had picked up along the way.
I remember asking my husband "what was THAT?" He told me it was "just a dust devil." They are actually kind of "cute" from a distance, like a mini tornado. They whirl and swirl and kick up some dust and debris, and **poof** just as quickly as they show up, they are gone!
I looked to find information on these phenomena of nature that I had never seen before (living in Wisconsin before we moved here to Nevada, I don't think we had them - although at times, there would be some leaves blowing in a circle, maybe that was something similar). I found out that dust devils are most often formed and seen on hot dry sunny clear days, when a swirling updraft of heated air causes them. They are very common here in the Mojave desert in Nevada, and even on the streets in Las Vegas.
They compare to tornadoes in that they are both swirling masses of air that is rotating vertically. But, in a dust devil the air is going upward, because of the tendency of heat to rise. And the good thing is, a dust devil rarely ever reaches the intensity of a tornado, and therefore doesn't do as much damage as a tornado can do. Although, there was one dust devil that happened at a fairgrounds in Arizona that caused some temporary tent structures to collapse, causing some damage. That one happened in the year 2000. But, it was memorable for being one of the very few dust devils that has caused damage. usually, they are pretty harmless.
Here in the Southwest United States, they are a pretty common occurrence. They go by several names, one being "dust devil" and others being a "dancing devil" or a "dirt devil." And me being as brilliant as I am, I bet the vacuum cleaner dirt devil got its name from the similar swirling action, and picking things up along its path. I could be wrong.
There have been stories among Indian tribes, especially the Navajo, that these dust devils are actually spirits of deceased. And if the whirlwind is spinning clockwise, the spirit in it is said to be a good one, if it spins counter-clockwise, the spirit in it is evil. These dust devils can show up in desert areas all over the world, and each place they show up, they have different names. In Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Jordan, they are known as djin, which loosely translated means "genies" or "devils."
In Iran, they are called "round wind" and in Egypt, they are called "ghost wind." Whatever name they go by, they are normally reserved for desert locations and wide open spaces. When they do occur in a city on a street for example (like the one we saw), they are known as "Nevada Tornadoes."
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