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I seen that too and I am baffled.I think now would be a good time to mention that we're still missing many, many DIs along this path, including but not limited to that group of houses SW of Mayfield along Pritchett Road, the entire subdivision surrounding the Princeton GC, the blanket DIs applied in Cambridge Springs and to the east of the lakes, and several buildings in downtown Mayfield including the First Presbyterian Church.
He can be a bit opaque sometimes, but I think what he means is that the "official" length will always be 219 miles even though we now have reason to believe it may be wrong. Which is to say, we know the historical record is busted and we probably won't ever fix it. That's my interpretation, at least.I'm confused about the Tri-State tornado part of the tweet. Is he saying he believes the 219 mile path length is the true path length of the Tri-State tornado or is he saying it is not?
The one paper said the path length of Tri-State tornado was 150-170 miles so maybe that is why what he is referring too.He can be a bit opaque sometimes, but I think what he means is that the "official" length will always be 219 miles even though we now have reason to believe it may be wrong. Which is to say, we know the historical record is busted and we probably won't ever fix it. That's my interpretation, at least.
Not totally sure how that's meant to be relevant to the rest of the tweet, but it's certainly true. Maybe the implication is that the path length of the Mayfield tornado would potentially rival the real length of the Tri-State, if we knew it for certain? I dunno. In any case, it's definitely in the same neighborhood if we assume that one or more of the potential gaps in the Missouri section of the path represent actual breaks.
I don't know If this was posted before. Inside tornado footage footage from Bremen area. Looks like on the edge of the tornado?(can't tell exactly) Definitely worthnoticing footage.
Probably.FWIW, I notice that Mayfield etc (or as they call it, the "2021 Western Kentucky Tornado") isn't yet on Wikipedia's list of controversial possible EF5s.
Is this because a sufficiently authoritative source such as Marshall (Vilonia) or a dissenting NWS survey team (Tuscaloosa) hasn't yet publicly challenged the EF4 rating? And, can we expect this to happen in the near future?
The StEER on the December 10, 2021 tornado outbreak was released.
https://www.designsafe-ci.org/data/...details-9096287461002973676-242ac117-0001-012
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Some of the most interesting details in it:
I wouldn't be surprised if this tornado was also a higher-end violent. It produced extreme debarking near Buckeye AR, and threw a semi-truck 100-200 yards. The semi-truck had an empty 50-ft trailer attached to it which was never found. It either got thrown extremely far or was completely obliterated as there is nothing that could be the trailer on aerial imagery from what I've seen. Also, that tugboat also could have been outside the intense/violent core of the tornado.I'm assuming this guy got lucky and took a hit while the tornado wasn't quite as strong. You can definitely hear wind and debris slamming the boat, but it doesn't get quite as violent as expected. This isn't far from where multiple semi-truck drivers took direct hits but survived, which kind of lends to this theory. There were also at least two other areas where the tornado did briefly weaken dramatically (south of Hornersville and south of Braggadocio), with much less intense damage than what occurred elsewhere.
Edit: Looks like there was an anemometer or some type of wind measurement device on the boat. It recorded mid-EF2 level winds (121 MPH) within the tornado, which is consistent with the type of tree damage that occurred nearby (though in the video he says 132 MPH, so it may have peaked a bit higher than the reading he photographed). This guy got extremely, extremely lucky.
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I wouldn't be surprised if this tornado was also a higher-end violent. It produced extreme debarking near Buckeye AR, and threw a semi-truck 100-200 yards. The semi-truck had an empty 50-ft trailer attached to it which was never found. It either got thrown extremely far or was completely obliterated as there is nothing that could be the trailer on aerial imagery from what I've seen. Also, that tugboat also could have been outside the intense/violent core of the tornado.