My takes on these over the years:
1.) I call this vehicle disassembly. When the vehicle is either stripped down to its chassis or literally torn apart into multiple pieces. Usually only seen in very high-end EF4 or EF5 candidate events, or in suspected extremely violent tornadoes that didn’t hit much (Spiritwood, ND for example)
2.) If we’re talking about buckling or partial dislodging of thick reinforced house or business foundations, then yes absolutely a good indicator of extreme intensity, and incredibly rare. The restaurant in Mount Hope is a great example, and honestly the only definite one I can think of right now. But…this is not the case if we’re talking about a small surface concrete foundation for a shed, or outbuilding, or grain bin or something. Those are usually poured thin and without reinforcements, so they can crack and buckle surprisingly easy. I’ve seen a thin pole barn slab buckle in an EF2. So in a nutshell, yes but only if it’s a thick slab.
3.) Extreme debarking and tree damage can indeed be a high-end indicator, especially if it takes place in rural areas without much debris loading. Think Louisville, Bassfield, Buckeye, Enderlin, Chickasha, El Reno/Piedmont, Vilonia, rural parts of the Bridge Creek path, rural parts of the Moore 2013 path, and rural parts of the Hackleburg path. Extra significant if multiple trees are completely stubbed and have literally zero bark remaining; as in genuine 100% debarking. Even more so if the trees are both root balled and totally debarked (Harper 2004 and Philadelphia 2011).
4.) Shrub shredding and debarking is another good high-end EF4 to EF5 indicator, but it has to be genuinely severe, not just partial. A good indicator of extreme low level winds, and provides great contextual support if the shrubs are around the perimeter of a well-anchored slabbed home.
5.) Good high-end indicator, but one to three feet is not genuine granulation or mulching, as plenty of tornadoes do that. Genuine granulated debris is fine enough to literally pour out of the palm of your hand, can fill up a glass mason jar, and is literally coin/wood-chip sized (think Parkersburg). This is very rare, and therefore one of the more reliable high-end indicators. Debris granulation is one of the most misunderstood contextual indicators, because people frequently see regular scattered debris and call it granulation when it’s not actually granulated. It truly has to be finely ground up into teeny tiny little fragments to be considered real granulation.
6.) Some cycloidal/spiral markings can be considered an EF5 indicator if analyzed mathematically. This is admittedly not something I know very much about. Ask
@Saltical Wx for more info on this.
7.) Hmmm….if it occurs in association with the destruction of a well-built, reinforced concrete building, then I’d say possibly. Problem with this, is it can also snap due to shifting weight and gravity as a building fails, but not necessarily wind. For example, rebar snapped within the walls of a collapsing factory building in Adairsville, GA back in 2013. That was an EF3 tornado, and the wind broadsided a massive factory wall, which fell, snapping the rebar, but not as a direct result of the wind, and not from a particularly violent tornado. I do however, recall a rebar support being snapped on a house foundation in Parkersburg too, which was pretty impressive. Overall I don’t know about this one, as it’s very dependent on the situation, the type of building, and the construction quality level.
8.) Anchor bolt shearing and removal
can be highly impressive if the bolts are properly installed. But conversely, it can be a sign that the bolts weren’t installed properly or weren’t drilled deeply into the concrete. This one is also iffy and situation dependent. Falls short of the “highly reliable” bar in my book.
9.) Nope nope nope, I tossed out relatively short distance vehicle throwing as a high-end indicator a long time ago. Just like trenching and asphalt scouring, I’ve simply seen it happen too many times well below EF5 intensity. 100 meters is nothing, and heck even a couple hundred meters isn’t that crazy. I have even seen vehicles get tossed comparable distances/mangled near structures that sustained only EF2 damage (Ensign, KS 2015/Deer Park, TX 2023). Believe it or not, I witnessed a very tightly wound high-end EF1 QLCS spin-up that lofted and mangled a pickup truck in my home town. Buildings in the immediate path only had roof and window damage. Now however, if it’s something huge and very heavy like a combine, loaded train car, a massive piece of farming equipment, or a huge fertilizer tank then it’s much more impressive and absolutely a possible indicator of EF5 strength. Now with that said, I do consider thrown vehicles to be high-end indicators in
some situations, but it has to be truly remarkable and extreme. What I mean by that is thrown a bare minimum of 3/4 of a mile. This may sound extreme, but that’s the point: these kinds of distances literally only happen in very high-end events. The goal is to identify things that almost exclusively happen in the most of violent tornadoes. So while a few hundred meters or so doesn’t mean much since it’s so common with your average EF4 (and sometimes occurs with EF2s and EF3s), 3/4 of a mile should be the benchmark because it’s the bare minimum distance that can be reasonably linked to very high-end events.
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10.) You forgot one! Concrete scouring. Super rare. Bakersfield Valley, Jarrell, El Reno/Piedmont. Almost never happens except for in high-end F5/EF5 events.
11.) Another one! Wind-rowing. Not as rock solid as others, but can sometimes still be a good hint at high-end intensity. I only really put much weight on it if it’s truly extreme (Andover, Vilonia, etc). I’ve seen moderate wind rowing below EF5 intensity. So you really need to see those massive, super long debris streaks that seemingly stretch on forever for it to be significant.