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The tornado outbreak of April 17–19, 2019 was a multi-day, widespread severe weather event stretching from the South-Central United States to the East Coast of the United States. On the heels of a significant tornado outbreak just a few days prior , another potent upper-level trough progressed eastward and served as the impetus for widespread ...
A significant severe weather and tornado outbreak affected the Southern United States between December 16–17, 2019. Discrete supercells developed in the early morning on December 16 and moved northeast, spawning multiple strong, long-tracked tornadoes in cities such as Alexandria and in Laurel before congealing into an eastward-moving squall line.
Lake Thunderbird–Bethel Acres–Shawnee, Oklahoma tornado: EF4 [8] 2013: May 19: Lake Thunderbird–Bethel Acres–Shawnee, Oklahoma tornado: EF4 [9] 2014: June 17: Coleridge, Nebraska tornado: EF3 [10] 2015: April 9: 2015 Rochelle–Fairdale tornado: EF4 [11] 2019: March 3: 2019 Beauregard tornado: EF4 [12] [13] 2019: March 3: Huber, Georgia ...
An EF4 tornado tore through the western Mississippi town of Rolling Fork on Friday night, causing total destruction as it ripped through the small, tight-knit community. The outbreak of storms ...
Satellite images show the scale of destruction in Rolling Fork, Mississippi after a powerful tornado tore across the state on Friday 24 March. At least 25 people were killed and hundreds of ...
Another EF2 tornado damaged homes and destroyed outbuildings in Star, Mississippi. Two EF1 tornadoes in Louisiana and Mississippi also caused damage that was mostly limited to trees. On the morning of November 27, a low-topped supercell spawned three brief EF0 tornadoes in Pike and Barbour Counties in Alabama, resulting in minor damage.
The maximum path width of the storm was three-quarters of a mile, and the tornado lasted for approximately 70 minutes between around 8 p.m. and 9:10 p.m., local time.
A tornado developed just south of Sahoma Lake and quickly traversed it. A debris ball signature was apparent on radar during the event; however, survey teams were unable to access these areas due to flooding. The tornado's path and intensity are based on radar data. [115] EFU SW of McBride: Marshall: OK