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List of reported tornadoes - Friday, March 9, 2012 EF# Location County Coord. Time (UTC) Path length Comments/Damage Hawaii: EF0: ESE of Kailua: Honolulu: 0910 1.5 miles (2.4 km) Tornado started as a waterspout that moved ashore.
The year began with an unusual number of tornadoes during January 2012. The first major tornado outbreak occurred on January 22–23, when a spring-like system moved across the southern Mississippi valley, producing at least two dozen confirmed tornadoes across Arkansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Alabama. As a whole, January was the ...
February 2012 was more active than normal in terms of the number of tornadoes, with a total of 50 confirmed. While the first three weeks of the month were unusually quiet, the pattern changed abruptly with a major tornado outbreak, which struck the region less than 72 hours prior to this storm, killing 15 people, including 8 in Harrisburg, Illinois alone, the result of an EF4 tornado.
After that, and more than twice as deadly as tornadoes is flooding over the last decade (2014-2023). Note that this does not include 2024’s Hurricane Helene, which caused scores of flooding ...
Tornado outbreak of March 2–3, 2012. Tornados hit the midwestern and southern United States two days after the 2012 Leap Day tornado outbreak. [permanent dead link ] Widespread damage is reported in southern Indiana with the towns of Marysville, Indiana and Henryville, Indiana worst affected. (The New York Times)
The New Orleans metro area was struck by a strong tornado on this date in 2017, one of six tornadoes in southeast Louisiana. One was the area's strongest since the mid-20th century.
On March 2, 2012, a large, long-tracked tornado struck the communities of New Pekin, Henryville, Marysville and Chelsea, Indiana. On March 6, the National Weather Service Louisville, Kentucky rated the worst of the damage EF4 with winds of 175 miles per hour (282 km/h). [ 84 ]
The Tornado outbreak sequence of March 18–24, 2012 was a long lasting tornado outbreak that occurred due to a slow moving, but powerful trough and cutoff low. The outbreak began in the Great Plains, where, over a two-day period, several tornadoes touched down, some of which were significant.