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The tornado outbreak of April 9–11, 2009 was a tornado outbreak that affected large portions of the Southern United States on April 9–11, 2009. At least 5 people were killed by tornadoes including three in Mena, Arkansas and two in Murfreesboro, Tennessee just south of Nashville. A total of 85 tornadoes were confirmed over the two days.
Adjusted annual tornado report count in the United States compared to minimum, maximum, and climatological percentiles. In contrast to the first nine months of 2008, the final quarter was fairly inactive overall, and the inactivity continued into January 2009 with only a few tornadoes in the US the entire month as generally stable air dominated.
Number of tornadoes in United States by year and intensity. United States tornadoes by year [1] [2] ... 2009: 1,147 0 695 348 82 20 2 0 2010: 1,282 0 768 342 127 32 13 0
These are lists of all tornadoes that have been confirmed by local offices of the National Weather Service in the United States in 2009. List of United States tornadoes from January to March 2009; List of United States tornadoes in April 2009; List of United States tornadoes in May 2009; List of United States tornadoes in June 2009
Nashville was spared of any tornadoes, however one tornado did strike down in East Tennessee in Morgan County. An EF-1 tornado touched down around Sunbright at 5:20 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time, no ...
Since 2003, such sirens have been used in the state to alert residents to imminent danger from tornadoes.. In 2013, a $2m grant was provided to the Nashville county to upgrade the system with new ...
According to NWS Nashville, the EF-3 tornado in Clarksville, which killed three and injured 62 people, tracked for 43 miles across Montgomery, Todd and Logan Counties and was on the ground for ...
March 1933 Nashville tornado outbreak: March 14, 1933: Tennessee Valley >5: 44 fatalities, 461 injuries: Destructive F3 tornado through downtown Nashville, killing 11 people. Other tornadoes touched down across the Ohio Valley, including an F4 that killed 12. (≥5 significant, 1 violent, ≥4 killer) Late-March 1933 tornado outbreak