Tornadoes of 2016

Tornadoes of 2016

A bar graph of the 2016 United States tornado count through October 6
Timespan January 6 - Ongoing
Maximum rated tornado

EF4 tornado

Tornadoes in U.S. 884
Damage (U.S.) Unknown
Fatalities (U.S.) 17[1]
Fatalities (worldwide) 129

This page documents notable tornadoes and tornado outbreaks worldwide in 2016. Strong and destructive tornadoes form most frequently in the United States, Bangladesh, and Eastern India, but they can occur almost anywhere under the right conditions. Tornadoes also develop occasionally in southern Canada during the Northern Hemisphere's summer and somewhat regularly at other times of the year across Europe, Asia, and Australia. Tornadic events are often accompanied with other forms of severe weather, including strong thunderstorms, strong winds, and hail.

There have been 1,034 tornadoes reported in the United States in 2016 so far,[2] of which at least 884 have been confirmed. Worldwide, 129 fatalities have been reported so far: 99 in China, 17 in the United States, five in Uruguay, four in Brazil and two in Italy and Russia each. So far, 2016 has been below-average in terms of tornado activity, but near-record tornado numbers occurred in February.

Synopsis

Fatal tornadoes in 2016
January 17
February 23
February 23
February 24
February 24
April 27
May 9
May 9
Nov 30
Nov 30
Approximate touchdown location of killer tornadoes in 2016
Summary of tornadoes[3]
  • January 17 – Florida (2 deaths)
  • February 23 – Louisiana (2 deaths)
  • February 23 – Mississippi (1 death)
  • February 24 – Virginia (3 deaths)
  • February 24 – Virginia (1 death)
  • April 27 – Texas (1 death)
  • May 9 – Oklahoma (1 death)
  • May 9 – Oklahoma (1 death)
  • Nov 30 – Tennessee (2 deaths)
  • Nov 30 – Alabama (3 deaths)
Total Fatalities: 17

Tornado activity was expected to be low during the first quarter of 2016 due to a major El Niño event that would last into early spring.[4] However, this did not come to fruition, as 2016 had the third most active first two months of the past 10 years, only behind 2008 and 2007.[5] A significant outbreak impacted the southeastern and South Atlantic states on February 23 and 24; 61 confirmed tornadoes occurred, including four which were rated EF3. Seven fatalities occurred as a result of the outbreak. The generally above-average trend continued, to a much lesser degree, throughout the month of March, which saw 75 confirmed tornadoes. April, by contrast, was below average in terms of tornadic activity, with 115 confirmed tornadoes across the United States in the space of the month. On April 15, a large F3 multiple-vortex tornado struck the city of Dolores in Uruguay, demolishing over 400 buildings and causing five fatalities.

Beginning in May, however, tornado activity increased, with a significant tornado outbreak affecting the central United States from May 7 through May 10, producing the first EF4 tornado of the year. In the middle of the month, it was relatively quiet; however, from May 22 through May 26, another significant outbreak occurred, which produced multiple strong to violent tornadoes. A tornado family impacted southwestern Kansas near Dodge City in the evening of May 24; five of the tornadoes were rated EF3, though no fatalities occurred. The most significant tornado of the event was a high-end EF4 wedge tornado which tracked through Ottawa and Dickinson Counties in central Kansas. A split-level home to the north of Abilene was swept away; numerous vehicles including a Freightliner truck and a combine harvester were tossed and mangled beyond recognition, and a set of railroad tracks near Chapman were bent horizontally. An additional 11 tornadoes were confirmed on May 26; however, most were weak.

June was somewhat below average in terms of tornadic activity; 90 tornadoes were reported over the course of the month, of which 55 were confirmed. In the evening of June 11, an EF3 tornado impacted the city of Baker, Montana, demolishing several homes and a steel-framed barn. In the early afternoon of June 23, an isolated violent tornado impacted the outskirts of Yancheng in the Jiangsu province of China, where numerous homes were leveled, several vehicles were tossed, cell phone towers were destroyed and trees were completely debarked and denuded. The China Meteorological Association assigned the tornado a rating of EF4. July saw near-average tornadic activity throughout the United States, with 104 tornadoes being reported over the course of the month, though no significant outbreaks occurred. Tornadic activity in August was near-average in the United States, with 92 tornadoes having been reported as of August 27. In the evening of August 24, a rare outbreak of tornadoes impacted the states of Indiana and Ohio, along with the Canadian province of Ontario, with significant damage occurring in Kokomo, Indiana, Defiance, Ohio, and Windsor, Ontario. The outbreak caused relatively few injuries and no fatalities.

Events

United States yearly total

Confirmed tornadoes by Enhanced Fujita rating
EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5 Total
278 237 61 23 2 0 604

January

There were 20 tornadoes reported in the United States in January, of which 18 were confirmed.

January 16–17

EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 1 2 0 0 0

Several tornadoes were reported in the Tampa Bay area late in the evening of January 16 and into the early morning of January 17. The most significant tornado of the event, rated EF2, completely destroyed a mobile home and caused severe damage to a barn in the Duette area, resulting in two fatalities. Another high-end EF2 tornado damaged numerous structures in Siesta Key, including one home that had its second floor completely destroyed.[6]

January 21

EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
2 3 1 0 0 0

Six tornadoes touched down across the Deep South, five of which occurred in Mississippi. The strongest tornado of the event was a low-end EF2 near Sumrall, which caused considerable damage to a house and a garage.

February

There were 138 tornadoes reported in the United States in February, of which 102 have been confirmed. This makes it the most active February since 2008.[7]

February 2–3

EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
3 8 3 0 0 0

Several tornadoes were reported across western Alabama and eastern Mississippi on February 2, including a large wedge tornado that struck Collinsville, Mississippi, tearing roofs off homes in the town and causing major structural damage at a church complex. Another EF2 tornado struck the west side of Scooba, causing damage to homes and the East Mississippi Community College campus. The most significant tornado of the day was a very high-end EF2 wedge tornado that destroyed numerous mobile homes and heavily damaged frame homes near McMullen, Alabama before it struck the nearby town of Carrollton, downing many trees. The following day, a high-end EF1 tornado caused considerable damage at Fort Stewart, Georgia. Overall, the event produced 14 tornadoes and no fatalities.[8][9]

February 15–16

EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
9 12 2 1 0 0

A small but significant tornado outbreak impacted Florida and the Gulf Coast region of the United States. The event began on February 15, as multiple tornadoes affected an area extending from Louisiana to the Florida Pandhandle. This included a high-end EF2 tornado that caused major damage in and around Wesson, Mississippi. Later that evening, a large EF3 tornado (the first EF3 of 2016) struck the town of Century, Florida and destroyed numerous homes and mobile homes in the area. An EF1 tornado caused considerable damage in Sylvarena, Mississippi, while an EF2 completely destroyed a volunteer fire department building in Johnsonville, Alabama. Tornado activity continued the following day, as a few weak tornadoes occurred in the Miami metropolitan area and in North Carolina as well. The outbreak resulted in a total of 24 tornadoes and no fatalities.[8]

February 23–24

EF3 damage to an apartment building in Pensacola, Florida.
EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
23 29 5 4 0 0

The second largest February tornado outbreak on record impacted the Gulf Coast and East Coast regions of the United States beginning on February 23. The first significant tornadoes of the outbreak moved across southeastern Louisiana and southern Mississippi that evening, leaving significant damage and three deaths. The towns of Livingston and Laplace, Louisiana sustained heavy damage from strong EF2 tornadoes, and another EF2 near Purvis, Mississippi killed one person in a mobile home.[10] An EF3 tornado also caused major structural damage in Paincourtville, Louisiana before destroying an RV park in Convent, killing two people at that location. Three simultaneous waterspouts were observed over Lake Pontchartrain during the event as well.[11] Later that night, a large supercell thunderstorm developed over the Gulf of Mexico and moved ashore, producing a destructive EF3 tornado in Pensacola, Florida. The tornado injured three people and destroyed homes, townhouses, apartments, and a GE warehouse.[12]

The outbreak continued the following day as strong tornadoes impacted the East Coast states of Virginia, Pennsylvania, and North Carolina on February 24, killing four people. An EF1 tornado struck the town of Waverly, Virginia, killing three people in a mobile home, including a two-year old child.[13] An EF3 tornado struck the town of Evergreen, Virginia, causing severe damage and killing one person at that location. An EF2 tornado caused major damage to homes near Oxford, North Carolina, and another EF2 tornado touched down near White Horse, Pennsylvania, damaging up to 50 structures in the area. Another EF3 tornado occurred later that night near the Virginia town of Tappahannock, destroying multiple homes along its path. About 35,000 people in Virginia, 4,000 in Washington, D.C., and 47,000 in the Carolinas lost power due to the storms. Seven people were killed by tornadoes during the outbreak, and a total of 61 tornadoes were confirmed.[14]

March

93 tornadoes were reported in the United States in March, of which at least 85 have been confirmed.

March 1

EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
2 0 1 0 0 0

An EF2 tornado struck the McCalla, Alabama area, causing major damage to numerous homes and injuring four people. An EF0 tornado caused minor tree damage in the northern part of Opelika, Alabama, and another EF0 near Sylacauga, Alabama caused minor damage to homes and destroyed outbuildings.[15]

March 7–8

EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
3 5 0 0 0 0

A historic flood event occurred in Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi, but the system also produced eight tornadoes in Texas. The first EF1 tornado touched down during the evening of March 7, near Cool and damaged or destroyed several homes. The second EF1 tornado occurred in Stephenville the next morning and damaged several businesses and an apartment complex, causing one injury. It was embedded in a large swath of straight-line winds that damaged other areas of Stephenville. The third EF1 tornado touched down near Tolar shortly after the Stephenville tornado and heavily damaged six manufactured homes, causing two injuries.[16] Three other EF0 tornadoes touched down in The Colony, Benbrook and near Andice later in the morning.[17][18] Shortly after noon on the 8th, an EF1 tornado damaged several homes, manufactured homes, and ten power poles in Navarro and Henderson counties.[19] That evening, the eighth and final tornado of the event touched down near Fredonia and was rated an EF1.[20] Flooding occurred the night of March 7 in areas west of Fort Worth, Texas, and severe flooding occurred in Louisiana starting during the night of the 8th and spreading to other locations in the following days. Evacuations were ordered in Haughton, where 30 homes were flooded, and at least 40 buildings and the Webster Parish Courthouse were flooded in Minden. In addition, evacuations also took place in Greenwood, Hammond, Rayville and Homer in Louisiana, Petal and Seminary in Mississippi, Dermott, Arkansas, and near Lake Mexia in Texas. Record river flooding also occurred on a stretch of the Sabine River due to record releases from the Toledo Bend Reservoir, and other record or near-record crests occurred on many other rivers across the South. Rain totals of up to 24 inches were recorded in northern Louisiana, with the highest total near Monroe, Louisiana.[21]

March 15

High-end EF2 damage to a house on the outskirts of East Moline, IL.
EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
3 3 3 0 0 0

During the morning of March 15, the Storm Prediction Center introduced an enhanced risk of severe thunderstorms for west central Illinois, southeastern Iowa, and northeastern Missouri, with a 10% chance of tornadoes for the same areas.[22] The enhanced risk area was expanded westward in subsequent outlooks.[23] That night, a small tornado outbreak occurred in eastern Iowa and western Illinois.[24] A high-end EF2 tornado tracked near Rapids City, Illinois, injuring 10 people and destroying homes in a semi-rural subdivision near East Moline, while an EF0 touched down near McCausland, Iowa, causing minor tree damage. Another EF2 caused considerable damage near Trivoli, Illinois in Peoria County, and an EF0 caused damage in the city of Peoria and Peoria Heights. An EF1 occurred near Curran, Illinois, causing damage to homes west of Springfield, and another EF0 touched down north of Deer Grove, Illinois. A large tornado touched down in Good Hope, Illinois, initially causing EF0 roof damage in town before reaching EF2 strength further to the northeast, heavily damaging multiple farmsteads. Two other EF1 tornadoes touched down in Clinton County, Iowa, one of which struck a mobile home park near Low Moor, injuring three people. A total of nine tornadoes were confirmed from this event.[25][26]

March 30–April 1

EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
6 20 3 0 0 0

Early in the evening of March 30, a localized but significant tornado event impacted Oklahoma and Arkansas, including an EF2 that caused heavy damage to homes, businesses, and industrial buildings in the northern part of Tulsa, injuring four people. A second EF2 tornado from the same parent supercell severely damaged homes near Claremore, and destroyed barns at Will Rogers Downs. The following day, numerous weak tornadoes touched down in southern Middle Tennessee, Mississippi and Alabama, causing mostly minor damage. However, an EF2 tornado destroyed mobile homes and downed many trees near Hartselle and Priceville, Alabama. Tornado activity continued on the morning of April 1, as a few weak tornadoes occurred in parts of Alabama and Georgia. Overall, this outbreak produced 29 tornadoes and no fatalities.[27]

April

120 tornadoes have been reported in the United States in April, however, at least 140 have been confirmed.

April 15 (Uruguay)

On April 15, a large F3 tornado struck the city of Dolores, Uruguay,[28] destroying at least 400 homes and buildings.[29] Five people were reported dead and more than 250 were injured.[30][31][32] Uruguay declared a state of emergency for the city of Dolores, and the tornado was later rated F3.[29][33][34] Storms, including floods, affected the rest of the country, with five more deaths in other departments.[35]

April 26–27

EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
25 32 0 0 0 0

On April 26 and 27, a large but weak tornado outbreak occurred across a large portion of the Great Plains. On the afternoon of April 26, the Storm Prediction Center issued a PDS tornado watch for most of the state of Oklahoma as well as portions of central Texas. A 10% hatched risk area for tornadoes extended from Nebraska to Texas, and multiple intense tornadoes were expected.[36] However, the wind profile that evening did not support sustained supercell thunderstorms. As a result, only scattered weak tornadoes occurred, though EF1 tornadoes caused minor to moderate damage in parts of Oklahoma City and Tulsa.[37][38] Weak tornado activity continued the following day in Nebraska, Iowa, Illinois, Missouri, and Kentucky,[39] including an EF0 and an EF1 that caused minor damage in the western part of Omaha. An early morning EF0 blew a large tree over onto a mobile home near Tomball, Texas, killing an elderly woman inside. Overall, the outbreak produced at least 57 tornadoes and one death.[40]

April 29–30

EF2 damage to a sporting goods store in Lindale, Texas.
EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
2 9 4 0 0 0

A storm system produced 15 tornadoes across parts of Oklahoma and Texas on the evening of April 29 and the following day. Two EF1 tornadoes destroyed mobile homes near Fletcher and Ninnekah, Oklahoma, and an EF2 caused major damage to some businesses in Lindale, Texas. The parent supercell that produced the Lindale tornado went on to produce a very large and long-track EF2 tornado that knocked over a cell phone tower, destroyed mobile homes, and severely damaged a frame home to the east of town. Another EF2 tornado damaged 27 homes near Alto, completely tearing the roofs off of two of them and destroying two travel trailers as well. A fourth EF2 tornado injured three people on April 30 when it completely destroyed a mobile home near Call, Texas.[40]

May

239 tornadoes have been reported in the United States in May, of which at least 216 have been confirmed.

May 7–10

EF3 tornado in Mayfield, KY.
EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
34 12 6 4 1 0

A significant tornado outbreak occurred across an area extending from Colorado to Kentucky, beginning with a large multiple-vortex EF2 tornado that tossed several RVs and injured two people near Wiggins, Colorado on May 7. Later that evening, a large stovepipe tornado caused high-end EF2 damage near Wray, while several other tornadoes tracked across other very rural areas of Colorado, causing no damage.[41] Scattered tornadoes occurred on May 8, most of which were weak. However, a strong EF2 tornado caused considerable damage to outbuildings and high-voltage transmission line poles near Catharine, Kansas. On May 9, a significant tornado event unfolded across Oklahoma, as several strong to violent tornadoes touched down and caused severe damage in several parts of the state. A violent EF4 stovepipe tornado (the first EF4 of 2016 and the first violent tornado in the United States since an EF4 in Garland, Texas on December 26) near Katie, Oklahoma killed one person, leveled and swept away multiple homes, and left behind an extensive swath of ground scouring, while a large EF3 wedge tornado from the same parent supercell caused major damage near Sulphur. An EF3 tornado that tracked from near Connerville to Bromide destroyed a house and killed one person. An extremely large EF3 multiple-vortex tornado reached a maximum width of about 1.8 miles (2.9 km) as it passed near Boswell, snapping and denuding numerous trees, destroying mobile homes, heavily damaging frame homes, and toppling two large metal power line truss towers along its path. Other strong tornadoes occurred as far north as Nebraska, including an EF2 tornado that tore the roof and some exterior walls from a home near Nehawka and injured one person. An EF1 tornado also caused minor damage in residential areas of Lincoln. Significant tornado activity continued on May 10, as several tornadoes moved across areas of western Kentucky, including an EF3 tornado that injured 10 people as it moved through the north edge of Mayfield, Kentucky, destroying numerous homes, vehicles, and businesses. Another tornado caused EF2 damage near Hartford. Overall, this outbreak killed two people and produced 57 tornadoes.[40]

May 14 (Europe)

F0 F1 F2 F3 F4 F5
4 2 1 1 0 0

A tornado outbreak struck Russia and Ukraine. About 15 tornadoes were reported in that day in Rostov, Luhans'k, Stavropol' and Volgograd oblasts. Most of them didn't cause any damage. However, one of them, the strongest, was classified as an F3 that caused damage along a 56 km (35 mi) path, injuring five people in the process.[42][43]

May 15 (Brazil)

Two nighttime F2 tornadoes affected rural areas in the state of Santa Catarina in southern Brazil, destroying homes and cars. The tornadoes caused 4 deaths and 21 injuries.[44]

May 22–26

High-end EF4 damage to a brick house near Chapman, Kansas, with destroyed farm machinery in the background.
EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
44 26 8 8 1 0

During the week of May 22–27, a southwards dip in the jet stream occurred in the West near Colorado, with favorable thermodynamics advecting northwards and setting the potential for a tornado outbreak. In the early afternoon of May 22, an Enhanced risk was issued by the Storm Prediction Center for extreme southwestern Kansas, the Oklahoma Panhandle, and northern Texas.[45] Numerous tornadoes touched down along the dryline that evening, with the strongest tornadoes touching down in Texas. This included a large, rain-wrapped EF3 tornado that destroyed homes and vehicles near Big Spring. Another EF3 destroyed oil pump jacks near Garden City, while two EF2 tornadoes in the same general area snapped numerous trees and power poles, damaged additional pump jacks, and destroyed a mobile home.[46] Less widespread tornado activity occurred on May 23, with mainly scattered weak tornadoes occurring across central and southern Plains. However, a large nighttime wedge tornado caused EF3 damage to metal pylon power poles near Turkey, Texas that night.[47][48]

A significant outbreak of strong tornadoes affected Kansas on May 24. A single cyclic supercell produced nearly a dozen highly-visible tornadoes near Dodge City, with several reports of multiple tornadoes on the ground simultaneously. A total of five EF3 tornadoes and three EF2 tornadoes were confirmed in western Kansas that evening, affecting rural areas near Dodge City, Jetmore, Ness City, Lewis, and Kinsley. Scattered weak tornadoes were also observed across other parts of Kansas and other states as well.[49] Less significant activity was expected on May 25, and only a few tornadoes occurred, though this included a half-mile wide EF4 wedge tornado that tracked from near Solomon to east of Chapman, Kansas. This violent tornado obliterated farm homes, debarked trees, bent railroad tracks, and mangled farm machinery and vehicles beyond recognition, though no injuries or fatalities occurred along the path.[50][51] Another significant outbreak of tornadoes occurred was expected to occur across Kansas on May 26, and a Moderate Risk with a 15% hatched risk area for tornadoes was issued by the Storm Prediction Center.[52] Despite this, early initiation of storms combined with an unfavorable wind profile prevented a significant outbreak from occurring. However, a high-end EF1 tornado caused considerable damage in Bryan, Texas, while an EF2 and an EF1 occurred simultaneously near Navasota, resulting in heavy damage. Despite producing numerous strong to violent tornadoes, this outbreak sequence only affected rural areas, resulting in no fatalities and few injuries. 87 tornadoes were confirmed as a result of the outbreak sequence.[53]

June

92 tornadoes have been reported in the United States in June, of which at least 86 have been confirmed.

June 11

On the evening of June 11, an isolated EF3 tornado struck the town of Baker, Montana, destroying six homes and damaging at least 50 more. Many trees were snapped, denuded, and stripped of foliage. Several horses were killed, and six people were injured.[54]

June 23 (China)

Main article: 2016 Jiangsu tornado
EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 0 0 0 1 0

A violent EF4[55] wedge tornado produced catastrophic damage as it impacted the outskirts of Yancheng in Jiangsu Province, China on the afternoon of June 23. Thousands of masonry construction homes were destroyed, many of which were leveled. Trees were debarked, vehicles were tossed and destroyed, and metal power line pylons and truss towers were bent to the ground. Schools and manufacturing plants sustained major damage as well. 99 people were killed and 846 others were injured, many of them critically.[56]

July

104 tornadoes have been reported in the United States in July, of which 103 have been confirmed.

July 7

EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
3 0 1 1 0 0

Five tornadoes touched down across parts of Kansas and Missouri on the evening of July 7, two of which were strong and caused significant damage in Greenwood County, Kansas. The first was a large and slow-moving EF3 wedge tornado that swept away a poorly anchored house, obliterated corn crop, and snapped and denuded numerous trees near the Otis Creek Reservoir. The second damaging tornado was an EF2 that struck the town of Eureka, causing heavy damage to homes, trees, and a grain elevator in town. Mobiles homes and outbuildings were completely destroyed, though no injuries or fatalities occurred.[57][58]

July 11–14 (Europe)

F0 F1 F2 F3 F4 F5
1 2 3 1 0 0

Ten tornadoes touched down over Poland, Belarus and Russia over the course of four days. On the 11th, two F2 tornadoes caused extensive damage in Belarus and Russia while on the 13th, another probable F2 struck Belarus (Kulyashouka, about 25 km east of Minsk) and another one, an F3 tornado, struck several villages in Moscow oblast, travelling for 44 km, killing two people and causing extensive damage.[43]

July 25–26 (South Africa)

Several tornadoes were spotted between the 25th and 26 July across Gauteng province in South Africa. The first was spotted in Randfontein on the West Rand of Johannesburg, where only minor damage was caused from trees being flattened, billboards pulled out of the ground and some roofs that were ripped off by strong winds. Another tornado swept through the East Rand in Tembisa and Kempton Park, northeast of OR Tambo International Airport. This tornado damaged the Tembisa Hospital as well as the Phumulani Mall in Tembisa. Approximately 20 people were injured and taken to nearby hospitals. No fatalities were reported.[59][60][61]

August

There have been 111 tornadoes reported in the United States in August of which at least 91 have been confirmed.

August 14 (Philippines)

Main article: 2016 Manila tornado

A rare tornado swept through the cities of Manila and Quezon City, in the Philippines. The tornado was spotted in the Port Area at around 4:30 PM and it was seen traveling towards the districts of Intramuros and Sampaloc, and then to Galas and New Manila in Quezon City. It toppled trees, electrical posts and destroyed property along its way. Among those hit and damaged was the National Press Club building in Intramuros. Parts of the glass staircase of the NPC was destroyed and as well as some of makeshift eateries in front. Several houses were reported damaged and a number of residents were injured in the Baseco compound in Tondo and at least 1,000 residents were evacuated from the tornado. The area is adjacent to the Port Area where the twister was believed to have formed. The twister also shattered the glass door of a 24-hour convenience store and toppled some trees on G. Tuazon Street.[62]

August 20

EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
8 4 0 0 0 0

On August 20, 2016, a storm system produced multiple weak tornadoes across portions of Michigan, Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky. Two EF0 tornadoes, part of a very weak tornado family of 6, caused damage and extensive power outages in the Grand Rapids metropolitan area.[63] Most damage occurred to trees and utility poles, but some damage to homes and structures happened mostly due to trees falling on them or weak construction. No fatalities or injuries resulted from this event.

August 24

EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
11 6 4 2 0 0
Farm machinery mangled beyond recognition by an EF3 tornado near Woodburn, Indiana.

An unusual late-season outbreak of 24 tornadoes impacted Indiana, Ohio, and Ontario on the afternoon and evening of August 24, some of which were strong and damaging. This outbreak was largely unexpected, as the Storm Prediction Center only issued a slight risk that day, with the tornado threat limited to a 2% threat area across parts of Kansas, Iowa, Missouri, and Illinois. Despite this, numerous tornadoes touched down further to the east across parts of the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes. The first tornado of the event was an EF2 that caused significant damage to homes and outbuildings near Linnsburg, Indiana. Later that day, an EF3 tornado struck the southern part of Kokomo, Indiana, damaging or destroying numerous homes, apartment buildings, and a Starbucks, as well as downing many trees and power lines. Another EF3 tornado near Woodburn, Indiana swept away a poorly anchored house, obliterated well-built barns, scoured farm fields, debarked trees, and mangled several vehicles and pieces of farm machinery. A car was carried at least 585 yards into a field into a by this tornado, and a combine was thrown 200 yards.[58] As the tornado activity pushed into Ohio later that evening, significant tornadoes continued to touch down as a large, multiple-vortex EF2 wedge tornado caused major damage to farmsteads near Cecil, Ohio, while another large EF2 wedge tornado caused severe damage to homes, barns, and a business near Defiance.[64][65] Further to the north, a high-end EF2 tornado ripped through parts of Windsor, Ontario, severely damaging several factories and industrial buildings along the E.C. Row Expressway, one of which was completely leveled. Multiple vehicles were severely damaged, including several large cube vans that were dragged through a parking lot. Garbage dumpsters were thrown up to 120 yards away, power poles were snapped, and large amounts of sheet metal was wrapped around guard rails and power lines. Trees were downed and homes sustained roof damage in residential areas as well.[66][67] Another tornado developed over the Detroit River before moving ashore and striking Lasalle, Ontario at EF1 strength, causing roof, window, and siding damage too homes as well as downing many trees and damaging several boats.[68] The outbreak produced numerous other weak tornadoes across the region before coming to an end. No fatalities occurred as a result of the outbreak.[58]

September

36 tornadoes were reported in the United States in September, of which 21 have been confirmed.

September 28 (Australia)

A severe thunderstorm event, which struck parts of the Australian state of South Australia, including the capital Adelaide, generated seven confirmed tornadoes with three rated as strong as F2, in what was the largest tornado outbreak ever recorded in the state.[69] An F2 filmed near Wilmington was powerful enough to bend large electricity towers in half, contributing to a total statewide power outage, as well as destroying several farm sheds and outbuildings.[69][70] Three other damaging tornadoes were officially analysed by the Bureau of Meteorology in the Mid North region, with houses un-roofed, grain silos destroyed and large areas of trees uprooted.[69] The storm outbreak also resulted in tennis-ball sized hail, damaging straight line winds and intense rainfall.[71]

October

23 tornadoes have been reported in the United States in October of which at least 16 have been confirmed.

October 6

EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
3 6 1 1 0 0

On October 6, the NWS issued an enhanced risk for severe thunderstorms in the Kansas area, along with a significant wind probability. Around 1600 UTC, the first tornado touched down, and by 2130 UTC, five tornadoes had touched down, leading to the declaration of a particularly dangerous tornado warning by this time as a large tornado was approaching Clay, producing widespread debris. By around 2200 UTC, it was reported to be 0.25 miles wide, and was doing extensive damages to mobile homes nearby.

October 14

EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 0 1 0 0 0

On October 14, an extratropical cyclone moved through the Pacific Northwest, causing two rare tornadoes in Oregon.[72] The first tornado was assigned an EF2 rating in Manzanita, where the tornado left behind torn roofs, damaged homes, and destroyed businesses. The second tornado touched down in Oceanside without causing any major damage. No injuries have been reported.[73]

November

There have been 67 tornadoes reported in the United States in November.

November 5 (Italy)

At least two people were killed and dozens more injured after a powerful tornado struck areas north of the capital Rome.[74]

November 27–30

EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
6 16 4 3 0 0

On November 27, 2 EF0s and an EF1 touched down in South Central Nebraska, causing minor damage. On November 28, the SPC issued an enhanced risk of severe weather for Louisiana and Mississippi. The storms on the 28th caused no tornadoes but produced high winds and heavy rain.

The next day, the SPC issued a Moderate risk for central Mississippi and portions of Louisiana, Alabama, and Tennessee. Throughout the evening, hail and winds battered Mississippi and moved into Alabama. 3 preliminary EF1's touched down across western Alabama. Not too long after an EF2 touched down in northeastern Madison county Alabama causing damage as it tracked towards the Tennessee state line. At around midnight, the storms moved into Northeastern Alabama and southern Tennessee, producing a strong EF3 tornado that leveled a church, day care center, and Rosalie Plaza in Rosalie and Ider, Alabama killing 3 people and injuring others. Around the same time, a preliminary EF3 caused heavy damage and killed 2 people in Polk County, Tennessee, followed by another preliminary EF2 in McMinn County, Tennessee. On November 30, tornadoes were reported in Louisiana, Georgia, and South Carolina. Overall, the outbreak produced around 30 tornadoes, and killed at least 5 people. A tornado watch remained in affect throughout the afternoon in Alabama.

See also

References

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