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It moved onshore, snapping and twisting some small trees and removing shingles from at least one home. The tornado then intensified, collapsing the porch of a home and significantly damaging a portion of its roof. The tornado continued northwestward through town, causing more minor damage to homes before dissipating at a golf course. [26] EF0
Follow for live updates here: 6 dead as Nashville, Middle TN ravaged by high winds, possible tornadoes. Hendersonville, Gallatin, Clarksville, Springfield, Cumberland Furnace and Madison, among ...
The tornado outbreak of April 15–16, 1998, also known as the 1998 Nashville tornado outbreak, was a two-day tornado outbreak that affected portions of the Midwestern United States, Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys on April 15 and April 16, 1998, with the worst of the outbreak taking place on the second day.
The tornado outlook issued by the SPC on the afternoon of December 9 (20:00 UTC) On December 5, the Storm Prediction Center issued a 5-day severe weather risk ahead of predictions that strong convective instability and wind shear would occur across portions of the Southern United States, from east Texas to western Mississippi.
At times, multiple vortices swirled within the tornado, which lasted for about 45 minutes and traveled about 44 miles. For less than a second, the researchers calculated wind speeds of more than ...
Watch as an Iowa tornado destroys a wind turbine. The drone footage starts by showing the tornado run through a residence as it crosses an Iowa field. As it moves further, it creeps closer to the ...
The tornado then rapidly dissipated as it neared the medical center, [9] uprooting small trees and damaging the siding of an outbuilding before lifting at 1:56 am CST on Laurel Avenue. [4] The tornado was on the ground for 8 minutes, tracked a total of 8.39 mi (13.50 km), and had an average ground speed of 63 miles per hour (101 km/h).
The tornado then dissipated at Laurel Avenue and West 6th Street at 1:56 a.m. CST (07:56 UTC), just west of Cookeville Regional Medical Center and southwest of Tennessee Tech. The university remained closed for the two days following the storm. This tornado was given an EF4 rating, with maximum estimated winds of 175 mph (282 km/h).