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Tornado outbreak of March 17–20, 2003: March 17–20, 2003: Great Plains – Southern United States: 28: 7: Camilla, Georgia, was devastated by an F3 for the second time in 4 years, killing 4. An F2 killed 2 people near Bridgeboro, Georgia. Many other weaker tornadoes touched down as well. Tornado outbreak sequence of May 2003: May 3–11, 2003
The tornado damaged houses, barns, trailers, garages, sheds, and at least one church. Many trees were downed as well. [12] Another F1 tornado damaged three mobile homes, 11 homes and four businesses from the Rosalie to Flat Rock communities in Alabama. [13] The final day of the outbreak was the most devastating.
List of tornadoes in the 1999 Oklahoma tornado outbreak; List of tornadoes in the May 2003 tornado outbreak sequence; List of tornadoes in the May 2004 tornado outbreak sequence; List of tornadoes in the outbreak of April 6–8, 2006; List of tornadoes in the outbreak of May 4–6, 2007; List of tornadoes in the 2008 Super Tuesday tornado ...
Geostorm. In a world where satellites control the weather (lol), all that stands between an expert hacker and world-ending natural disasters is one man, and one man only: Gerard Butler.
On June 24, 2003, an F4 tornado destroyed the community of Manchester, South Dakota, touching down at about 7:45 p.m., just around sunset. "It was illuminated by the sun back behind it, turning ...
A trailer and a vehicle were flipped by the tornado, injuring eight people. The tornado was initially thought to have been caused by straight-line winds prior to a 2015 reanalysis by National Weather Service Nashville, Tennessee. [101] F0 SE of Castalian Springs: Trousdale : TN
From May 3 to May 11, 2003, a prolonged and destructive series of tornado outbreaks affected much of the Great Plains and Eastern United States. Most of the severe activity was concentrated between May 4 and May 10, which saw more tornadoes than any other week-long span in recorded history; 335 tornadoes occurred during this period, concentrated in the Ozarks and central Mississippi River Valley.
But when he oversaw visual effects for this summer's hit disaster movie "Twisters" (starring Daisy Edgar-Jones and Glen Powell), that particular F-word never entered the conversation.