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The tornado then re-attained EF4 strength as it completely destroyed three large factories in an industrial area of town, including a Georgia-Pacific plywood plant. [27] The tornado maintained its strength as it devastated nearby subdivisions and an apartment complex, with some homes and one of the apartment buildings reduced to bare slabs.
The EF4 tornado first struck the recently built Vilonia Middle School, destroying the top floor and causing most walls to collapse. [3] With winds estimated as high as 190 mph (310 km/h) and the circulation spanning 3 ⁄ 4 mi (1.2 km), [ 9 ] the tornado moved through the town center.
EF4 W of Ferndale to Mayflower/Vilonia to N of El Paso: Pulaski, Faulkner, White: AR ... EF4 NE of Renfroe to Louisville: Leake, Neshoba, Attala, Winston: MS
An identical EF4 tornado paralleled the path of the main Pilger tornado and caused a fatality in a vehicle, caused major damage to farmsteads, and debarked many trees. [44] The same parent supercell also produced two other large EF4 tornadoes that passed near the towns of Stanton and Wakefield , sweeping away multiple farm homes and lofting ...
A large EF4 wedge tornado near the town of Rochelle, Illinois on April 9, 2015. EF4 damage to a farmstead near Sibley, Iowa on June 25, 2010 EF4 Tornadoes in the US, 2010–2019. This is a list of tornadoes that have been officially or unofficially labeled as F4, EF4, IF4, or an equivalent rating during the 2010s decade.
EF4 W of Ferndale to Mayflower/Vilonia to N of El Paso: Pulaski, Faulkner, White: AR 0006–0102 41.1 mi (66.1 km) ... EF4 EF5 Total 0 95 22 9 4 0 0 130
Mayflower—Vilonia, Arkansas: 2014 April 27: 16 193 EF4 2014 Mayflower–Vilonia tornado: Tanner, Alabama (#2)—Manchester, Tennessee: 1974 April 3: 16 190 F5 Grazulis reported 22 deaths and 250 injuries. This was the second F5 tornado to pass through Tanner during the 1974 Super Outbreak. (Grazulis, p. 1,160) 1974 Tanner tornadoes
2014 Mayflower–Vilonia tornado – Officially rated high-end EF4, though the rating was a major source of controversy, and meteorologist/civil engineer Timothy P. Marshall noted that the rating assigned was "lower-bound" and "the possibility that EF5 winds could have occurred" despite the structural flaws responsible for the EF4 rating.