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The evaluation of the extensive property losses began Sunday, including thousands of buildings badly damaged by two confirmed tornadoes, the Clarksville tornado was an EF-3, with winds of 150 mph ...
What paths did Tennessee tornadoes take? Herron said crews are continuing to assess the Clarksville and Madison storms and will assess paths in Springfield, which Herron called damaging, as well ...
As of 7:50 p.m. more than 160,000 customers across Middle Tennessee were without power, up from 63,000 earlier in the evening, according to outage maps from Middle Tennessee Electric, Cumberland ...
The last produced by the Clarksville supercell, the tornado maintained low-EF1 intensity though most of its track, causing damage to several structures, where winds were estimated to be 90 mph (140 km/h). The tornado tracked just south of the path of the deadly EF3 tornado nearly two years earlier. [25] EF2 N of Cumberland Furnace: Dickson: TN
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 63.1 miles per hour (101.5 km/h).
This image is in the public domain because it is from one or more of the U.S. government’s 159 NEXRAD radars, which are jointly owned and operated by the National Weather Service (NWS), an agency of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) within the United States Department of Commerce, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) within the Department of Transportation, and ...
A tornado cut a path through Columbia on Wednesday, causing untold damage and the death of at least one person in Middle Tennessee.. As people sifted through the destruction and tried to make ...
A single tornado traveled nearly 43 miles from the Clarksville area in Montgomery County to Logan County, cutting a path of destruction across both counties, according to the National Weather Service.