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This tornado caused tree damage and removed much of the roof of a metal building. [9] EF1 NE of Vera: Washington: OK [to be determined] 18:47–18:48 0.6 mi (0.97 km) 150 yd (140 m) An EF1 tornado was confirmed by NWS Tulsa. Preliminary information. [5] EF1 NE of Vera to W of Watova: Rogers, Nowata: OK
2017 Tulsa tornadoes; Meteorological history; Duration: August 6, 2017: Tornado outbreak; ... This was the first tornado to hit the Tulsa area in the month of August ...
On August 14, researchers with the Pressure Acoustics Research Inside Tornadoes EXperiment (PACRITEX) published research on some of the first pressure measurements and video observations inside three EF2 tornadoes taken by in-situ tornado probes. [154] [155] The first deployment of the probe was inside the 2016 Tulsa, Oklahoma tornado. Within ...
First of the Palm Sunday outbreaks; one of the deadliest outbreaks in US history. Tornadoes devastated the Great Lakes and Ohio Valley, including parts of the Chicago metropolitan area. Other long-track killer tornadoes tore across the Southern states. Official death toll is uncertain and may be considerably higher than what is listed.
Tulsa Area United Way active. F3 tornadoes in the Tulsa metropolitan area kill two people and, combined with flooding, produce the costliest natural disaster in city's history up to that time—a disaster worth $30,000,000; 1975 National Bank of Tulsa renamed Bank of Oklahoma (BOK) [51] Westhope added to NRHP. [relevant?]
Several tornadoes were reported in northern Oklahoma, with heavy winds blowing down power lines, damaging structures and injuring at least seven people. Oklahoma storm-packing tornadoes injure ...
Surveys done by the National Weather Service Tulsa, Oklahoma found evidence that smaller satellite tornadoes circulated around the larger tornado. The tornado itself was around 0.8 mi (1.3 km) wide at its widest point, with the damage width reaching around 3 mi (4.8 km) wide at times due to the smaller satellite tornadoes rotating around the ...
On June 8, 1974, a significant tornado outbreak affected portions of the southern Great Plains and the Upper Midwest.The outbreak produced 36 tornadoes, at least 19 of them significant or intense, and is the second-deadliest June tornado event in Oklahoma history, with 16 deaths reported in the state, second only to the 35 people killed by an F4 tornado on June 12, 1942, in Oklahoma City. [1]