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Significant Tornado Events

This is absolutely incredible. I cannot fathom how well put together this is and how awe inspiring this terrifying feat of damage is. 7 miles… good grief.
He mentioned this before! I stated in the EF Debate thread that it was one of many reasons I considered Greensburg a Top 10 Strongest of All Time tornado (I specifically called it stronger than Smithville which I don't really agree with anymore)...then literally the very next post in that thread was "EF5 drought is over, Enderlin upgraded to EF5" and my comment, and the comment it was a response to, was swept aside and soon forgotten.
 
(Lengthy post ahead)

I’ve mentioned in a few of my older posts I made about the Greensburg tornado that, while combing through ground and aerial damage photos, I noticed multiple large steel tanks that had landed within the town. I meticulously combed through every available photo I had at the time, as well as satellite imagery, to try and determine what the origin point of these tanks were. Even after receiving hundreds more photos and getting into contact with those who surveyed the event, I was still left stumped on the matter.

Well, after reviewing numerous available sources, images, and videos, I firmly believe I’ve now uncovered where these tanks originated from. What I found is honestly still hard to believe, but after going over every other possibility more times than I can count, it seems like the following is the only plausible explanation as to what happened here.

For starters, here’s some photos of the tanks that I was able to locate, along with a photo showing their locations that I plotted in Google Earth. After combing over thousands of ground and aerial photos I have in and around Greensburg, I found at least 7 tanks within the city limits.

View attachment 49496View attachment 49499View attachment 49500View attachment 49501View attachment 49502

You’ll notice that all of the tanks are similar in size and appearance, which to me suggested they likely were grouped together somewhere. As is quite clear, they are extensively mangled and crushed, with some actually being ripped open from being thrown significant distances. I was able to narrow down a few possible locations, but it was just educated guess work at that point.

Eventually I got a lead from a book I bought in which a farmer along Highway 183 described “great gouges” and oil spills in the land around his property from “oil tanks tumbling past.” There are several oil tanks and two natural gas substations in the area around the highway, but I didn’t think it was very likely at all that the tanks found in town originated there.

During my research into the event, I came across an old YouTube video posted by Dick McGowan, who had actually befriended the farmer from the book after he helped him out immediately following the tornado. In the video, him and the farmer met up a few months after in Greensburg and were driving around town. There’s a good deal of information in the video, but at one point the farmer pointed out the location where the tank in the last photo I shared had came to rest and said someone had spray-painted on the side of it “came from 7 miles south.” He went into more detail about the tanks that tumbled past his property and also mentioned the substation to the south, which had a collection of oil tanks.

Skip to 3:35 in the video to hear the point in the video mentioned above. The clip goes until 4:20.



My first thought after seeing this video was that it was locals spreading exaggerated and over-sensationalized information, as it’s not uncommon for that to happen after devastating disasters. On top of that, I honestly just didn’t believe an object of that size and weight could be carried that far—let alone at least 7 of them. Nonetheless, I continued researching to see what I could find.

After contacting some people and looking online, I learned that the tanks were almost certainly oil storage tanks. Tanks like those in the photos weigh anywhere from a little over one ton to perhaps several tons. Using satellite imagery, I noticed there is no other location impacted by the tornado that has a collection of oil tanks, other than the area along Highway 183, which is 7 miles south of town. Here’s a photo of the two natural gas substations, including the southernmost one with the oil tanks.

View attachment 49503View attachment 49504

On top of that, I found a video that pretty much confirmed to me that the tanks came from that location. In the video, the videographer is traveling south along Highway 183 and remarks about the gouges in the field, which can be seen clearly, along with black streaks indicating spilled oil. He then comes across the two substations, with the last one being the site with the collection of oil tanks. As becomes quite apparent, there are no more tanks at the site or anywhere near the area.

Skip to 4:27 and 5:19 to see the gouges, 4:35 for the first substation, and 5:23 for the substation with the tanks. Also of note, at 5:35 you can see a large oil spill near the treeline and around the 6:00 mark another (mostly intact) tank is visible which came from a separate collection of tanks south of the substations.



Both locations were impacted by the centerline of the tornado and subject to winds that were almost certainly of EF5 intensity, with extreme damage to the substations noted in other ground photos. To add to the video above, here’s a screengrab facing directly north toward the southernmost substation where the tanks were once located. (Bit of a disclaimer, there are deceased cattle visible in this photo)

View attachment 49505

I also meticulously looked over the available aerial imagery south of town after the tornado and was unable to find any sort of tanks or large objects (except 1, which could be a topic for later) anywhere in the rural areas affected by the tornado. This further adds on to the possibility that the missing tanks were blown all the way to Greensburg and not deposited in nearby creeks, etc.

To wrap this very long post up, it is worth mentioning that to my knowledge this is an extremely anomalous feat of damage in documented tornado history. A tornado transporting several, likely multi-ton tanks (that were full at the time) upwards of 7 miles is still hard to believe, and an indication of exceptional intensity in my opinion. It’s also worth mentioning that this is technically still my personal speculation and unofficial findings, as nothing has been definitively confirmed by any official sources to my knowledge, and I’m using available evidence I’ve located to come to this conclusion.

Is this a world record for something of this size and weight? I believe the fact that they were dropped in greensburg further reinforces the idea that the tornado reached its peak well south of town, considering that it had the strength to carry them that far.
 
This is absolutely incredible. I cannot fathom how well put together this is and how awe inspiring this terrifying feat of damage is. 7 miles… good grief.
Appreciate it! Yeah, it’s still hard to wrap my head around. I do believe this is the furthest distance an object of that size and weight has ever been carried by a tornado, though I’m not 100% certain on that. Either way, it’s just ridiculous stuff. There were several hills and creeks in the rural areas south of town that the tanks would have encountered, yet the tornado still managed to transport all of them up to the dense residential areas of Greensburg.

Also, here’s a rough estimate of the path the tanks likely took from the substation to the southern portion of Greensburg. They all came to rest not far from the centerline, so I’d assume they remained close to it for the majority of the journey.
IMG_2361.jpeg
 
Is this a world record for something of this size and weight? I believe the fact that they were dropped in greensburg further reinforces the idea that the tornado reached its peak well south of town, considering that it had the strength to carry them that far.
Only thing I can think of that threw an object 7 miles that wasn’t paper was Stratton 1990, which threw a cars firewall that distance and was one of the only things found of that car. It didn’t weigh 1% of Greensburgs oil tanks.

Also, Im done with 2 states for the map
IMG_2114.jpeg
 
He mentioned this before! I stated in the EF Debate thread that it was one of many reasons I considered Greensburg a Top 10 Strongest of All Time tornado (I specifically called it stronger than Smithville which I don't really agree with anymore)...then literally the very next post in that thread was "EF5 drought is over, Enderlin upgraded to EF5" and my comment, and the comment it was a response to, was swept aside and soon forgotten.
I did a short dive into it on Twitter, but no where near as close as in depth with supporting evidence as I went here.
I believe the fact that they were dropped in greensburg further reinforces the idea that the tornado reached its peak well south of town, considering that it had the strength to carry them that far.
It is a widely accepted opinion that it peaked south of town, and the evidence is there for it. However, the level of violence it reached as it started exiting Greensburg can’t be ignored. The tree and vegetation damage there is some of the most extreme I’ve ever seen, but it also checks virtually all the boxes you can think of that are synonymous with a top-tier EF5. With that being said, the ground scouring did appear at its most severe to the south of town, and I know of at least one instance where a pickup truck and cattle trailer were turned into nothing more than pieces strewn across the countryside.
Only thing I can think of that threw an object 7 miles that wasn’t paper was Stratton 1990, which threw a cars firewall that distance and was one of the only things found of that car. It didn’t weigh 1% of Greensburgs oil tanks.

Also, Im done with 2 states for the map
View attachment 49509
Yeah, I can’t really think of anything that matches the feat of damage seen with Greensburg, but again I may be missing something. Great work on that map by the way!
 
That is some phenomenal detective work there, @Western_KS_Wx! It is such an absurd feat of damage that I have a hard time accepting it as fact without further, independent verification; yet I also don't see any obvious flaws with your methodology.

If verifiable, that would at least rank among the most impressive feats of tornadic damage ever documented, right up there with what El Reno '11 did to the Catcus-117 oil rig if not more so.

Yet one more reason I've never accepted the notion that became popular among some for a time that Greensburg was a "marginal" EF5 or some sort of "Mulligan" EF5 because they didn't know how to apply the EF-scale properly yet.

In actual fact, Greensburg represented exactly what I thought it did in the immediate aftermath of the rating - a return to sanity following the "La Plata syndrome" final years of the F-scale and the first example of an absolutely upper-echelon tornado being properly rated as such since 1999. It was the drift away from that in the years following 2011 and especially 2013 that I've long taken issue with. Chickasha/Goldsby (and to an extent, Tuscaloosa) were the canaries in the coal mine; Vilonia was the miners keeling over.
 
That is some phenomenal detective work there, @Western_KS_Wx! It is such an absurd feat of damage that I have a hard time accepting it as fact without further, independent verification; yet I also don't see any obvious flaws with your methodology.

If verifiable, that would at least rank among the most impressive feats of tornadic damage ever documented, right up there with what El Reno '11 did to the Catcus-117 oil rig if not more so.

Yet one more reason I've never accepted the notion that became popular among some for a time that Greensburg was a "marginal" EF5 or some sort of "Mulligan" EF5 because they didn't know how to apply the EF-scale properly yet.

In actual fact, Greensburg represented exactly what I thought it did in the immediate aftermath of the rating - a return to sanity following the "La Plata syndrome" final years of the F-scale and the first example of an absolutely upper-echelon tornado being properly rated as such since 1999. It was the drift away from that in the years following 2011 and especially 2013 that I've long taken issue with. Chickasha/Goldsby (and to an extent, Tuscaloosa) were the canaries in the coal mine; Vilonia was the miners keeling over.
Thanks man! Yeah, it really is nuts. Trust me, after every other possibility and potential origin point had been ruled out, I honestly didn’t believe it. I genuinely didn’t think it was possible something like that could even happen. Even with all the evidence and reports being there, it still is hard to believe.

Unfortunately, due to Greensburg being rather poorly documented from official sources I don’t think we’ll get a definitive confirmation, though I have thought about emailing my findings to NWS Dodge City or the surveyors I’ve been in contact with. I’ll update if I get any sort of response.

Anyways, yeah obviously whenever I first started researching the event as someone who’d grown up hearing about it all the time from locals I was a bit biased towards the notion it wasn’t a marginal EF5. However, once I really started looking deeper and amassed thousands of damage photos it become quite obvious it was anything but marginal. I can understand where one could think that though, considering it’s one of the more poorly documented EF5’s.
 
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Thanks man! Yeah, it really is nuts. Trust me, after every other possibility and potential origin point had been ruled out, I honestly didn’t believe it. I genuinely didn’t think it was possible something like that could even happen. Even with all the evidence and reports being there, it still is hard to believe.

Unfortunately, due to Greensburg being rather poorly documented from official sources I don’t think we’ll get a definitive confirmation, though I have thought about emailing my findings to NWS Dodge City or the surveyors I’ve been in contact with. I’ll update if I get any sort of response.

Anyways, yeah obviously whenever I first started researching the event as someone who’d grown up hearing about it all the time from locals I was a bit biased towards the notion it wasn’t a marginal EF5. However, once I really started looking deeper and amassed thousands of damage photos it become quite obvious it was anything marginal. I can understand where one could think that though, considering it’s one of the more poorly documented EF5’s.
I remember people claiming that Greensburg should've been EF4, and one specific person made a model to judge tornado intensities - and, interestingly, it wouldn't put Greensburg at EF5 unless a number of EF4s got the rating as well. I think the more recent findings would change that.

For the record - I now think that Smithville was the stronger tornado. The gap between them is small indeed, but the circumstantial evidence I've seen implies Smithville was stronger. For one notable incident: both Greensburg and Smithville shredded semi trucks, but while Greensburg at least left a crumpled chassis and part of the trailer, Smithville literally reduced an eighteen wheeler to a single bumper. It also obliterated a pipe it was carrying without a trace.
 
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Is this a world record for something of this size and weight? I believe the fact that they were dropped in greensburg further reinforces the idea that the tornado reached its peak well south of town, considering that it had the strength to carry them that far.
I don’t think they were the same weight, but a pontoon boat was thrown 14 miles from the Clinton EF4.
 
(Lengthy post ahead)

I’ve mentioned in a few of my older posts I made about the Greensburg tornado that, while combing through ground and aerial damage photos, I noticed multiple large steel tanks that had landed within the town. I meticulously combed through every available photo I had at the time, as well as satellite imagery, to try and determine what the origin point of these tanks were. Even after receiving hundreds more photos and getting into contact with those who surveyed the event, I was still left stumped on the matter.

Well, after reviewing numerous available sources, images, and videos, I firmly believe I’ve now uncovered where these tanks originated from. What I found is honestly still hard to believe, but after going over every other possibility more times than I can count, it seems like the following is the only plausible explanation as to what happened here.

For starters, here’s some photos of the tanks that I was able to locate, along with a photo showing their locations that I plotted in Google Earth. After combing over thousands of ground and aerial photos I have in and around Greensburg, I found at least 7 tanks within the city limits.

View attachment 49496View attachment 49499View attachment 49500View attachment 49501View attachment 49502

You’ll notice that all of the tanks are similar in size and appearance, which to me suggested they likely were grouped together somewhere. As is quite clear, they are extensively mangled and crushed, with some actually being ripped open from being thrown significant distances. I was able to narrow down a few possible locations, but it was just educated guess work at that point.

Eventually I got a lead from a book I bought in which a farmer along Highway 183 described “great gouges” and oil spills in the land around his property from “oil tanks tumbling past.” There are several oil tanks and two natural gas substations in the area around the highway, but I didn’t think it was very likely at all that the tanks found in town originated there.

During my research into the event, I came across an old YouTube video posted by Dick McGowan, who had actually befriended the farmer from the book after he helped him out immediately following the tornado. In the video, him and the farmer met up a few months after in Greensburg and were driving around town. There’s a good deal of information in the video, but at one point the farmer pointed out the location where the tank in the last photo I shared had came to rest and said someone had spray-painted on the side of it “came from 7 miles south.” He went into more detail about the tanks that tumbled past his property and also mentioned the substation to the south, which had a collection of oil tanks.

Skip to 3:35 in the video to hear the point in the video mentioned above. The clip goes until 4:20.



My first thought after seeing this video was that it was locals spreading exaggerated and over-sensationalized information, as it’s not uncommon for that to happen after devastating disasters. On top of that, I honestly just didn’t believe an object of that size and weight could be carried that far—let alone at least 7 of them. Nonetheless, I continued researching to see what I could find.

After contacting some people and looking online, I learned that the tanks were almost certainly oil storage tanks. Tanks like those in the photos weigh anywhere from a little over one ton to perhaps several tons. Using satellite imagery, I noticed there is no other location impacted by the tornado that has a collection of oil tanks, other than the area along Highway 183, which is 7 miles south of town. Here’s a photo of the two natural gas substations, including the southernmost one with the oil tanks.

View attachment 49503View attachment 49504

On top of that, I found a video that pretty much confirmed to me that the tanks came from that location. In the video, the videographer is traveling south along Highway 183 and remarks about the gouges in the field, which can be seen clearly, along with black streaks indicating spilled oil. He then comes across the two substations, with the last one being the site with the collection of oil tanks. As becomes quite apparent, there are no more tanks at the site or anywhere near the area.

Skip to 4:27 and 5:19 to see the gouges, 4:35 for the first substation, and 5:23 for the substation with the tanks. Also of note, at 5:35 you can see a large oil spill near the treeline and around the 6:00 mark another (mostly intact) tank is visible which came from a separate collection of tanks south of the substations.



Both locations were impacted by the centerline of the tornado and subject to winds that were almost certainly of EF5 intensity, with extreme damage to the substations noted in other ground photos. To add to the video above, here’s a screengrab facing directly north toward the southernmost substation where the tanks were once located. (Bit of a disclaimer, there are deceased cattle visible in this photo)

View attachment 49505

I also meticulously looked over the available aerial imagery south of town after the tornado and was unable to find any sort of tanks or large objects (except 1, which could be a topic for later) anywhere in the rural areas affected by the tornado. This further adds on to the possibility that the missing tanks were blown all the way to Greensburg and not deposited in nearby creeks, etc.

To wrap this very long post up, it is worth mentioning that to my knowledge this is an extremely anomalous feat of damage in documented tornado history. A tornado transporting several, likely multi-ton tanks (that were full at the time) upwards of 7 miles is still hard to believe, and an indication of exceptional intensity in my opinion. It’s also worth mentioning that this is technically still my personal speculation and unofficial findings, as nothing has been definitively confirmed by any official sources to my knowledge, and I’m using available evidence I’ve located to come to this conclusion.



It's on par with the massive oil tanks tossed 3 miles by Bakersfield Valley; what likely helped is the flat rural area with no structures for miles round that would allow the tanks to be carried that far.
 
The asphalt scouring is the reasoning behind EF5 Americus.
Get a load of this dumbass

Anyway, going off topic - 2008 was a hell of a year for tornadoes, wasn't it? It's my pick for Best Tornado Year of the 2000s. It had basically everything you'd expect in a blockbuster year short of a Super Outbreak.
 
Get a load of this dumbass

Anyway, going off topic - 2008 was a hell of a year for tornadoes, wasn't it? It's my pick for Best Tornado Year of the 2000s. It had basically everything you'd expect in a blockbuster year short of a Super Outbreak.
Dude, if you think you’re a dumbass I used to think that El Reno 2013 and Washington, IL were the strongest tornadoes ever recorded lmao.

With El Reno though, it truly produced some remarkable vehicle damage and left behind some tree debarking/denuding that clearly points to at least a low-mid range EF4.
 
After contacting some people and looking online, I learned that the tanks were almost certainly oil storage tanks. Tanks like those in the photos weigh anywhere from a little over one ton to perhaps several tons. Using satellite imagery, I noticed there is no other location impacted by the tornado that has a collection of oil tanks, other than the area along Highway 183, which is 7 miles south of town. Here’s a photo of the two natural gas substations, including the southernmost one with the oil tanks.

View attachment 49503View attachment 49504
What are the coordinates for these?
 
View attachment 49516
Incredibly high end tree damage here from the Tylertown, MS EF4 that happened on March 15, 2025!
Hard to ascertain if that multi-tree downfall/debarking is on the same level of Bassfield/Lousiville’s respective EF4’s but it seems like it could be. It does confirm that Tylertown was capable of inflicting damage higher than low-end EF4, however. 3/13-3/16 of last year was simply insane.
 
Get a load of this dumbass

Anyway, going off topic - 2008 was a hell of a year for tornadoes, wasn't it? It's my pick for Best Tornado Year of the 2000s. It had basically everything you'd expect in a blockbuster year short of a Super Outbreak.

Oh, absolutely, although 2004 had a lot of highly photogenic Plains events (that's considered one of if not the best season of all for chasers who were active at the time) and 2003 had the famous early May outbreak sequence that was my introduction to tracking high-end severe weather events.

However '08 got that incredibly early start even in the Upper Midwest and then just kept going, starting with those January tornadoes in Illinois (the famous train derailment video) and even southeastern Wisconsin. I was still home from college on winter break at the time and the Madison area never got fully into the warm sector, instead we got a long-duration chilly (upper 30s-low 40s), foggy rain that melted the nice snowpack we had built up over the previous few weeks into muddy piles.

It was my senior year and I remember tracking Super Tuesday, the mid-March Southeast outbreak, and the Picher/Stuttgart outbreak from the computer lab at UW-Green Bay. However I really regret not pursuing chasing more aggressively that spring/summer.

The late May into June outbreak sequence began just a few days after graduation, and I went out locally a handful of times, starting on May 25, the Parkersburg day. I originally targeted La Crosse (which seemed reasonable but actually ended up almost perfectly midway between the two storms of the day in the region), but left too late and before I could even get there I got a call from my nowcaster (Alex Lamers, who went on to do big things in meteorology and is now the branch chief of Forecast Operations at the Weather Prediction Center!) who informed me of the ongoing Parkersburg cell. I picked my way southward through the hilly, winding back roads of the Driftless Area to meet up with what was left of it in Lancaster, WI where the most I saw was a rainbow and one decent CG lightning strike captured with my Hi8 video camera. On top of that I then got trapped in near-blinding rain from the trailing MCS in the darkness most of the way home.

05-25-08 Lighting 1.jpg

05-25-08_Rainbow1.jpg

I went out a couple more times during the continuing activity in early-mid June, including during the Midwest outbreak on the 7th which famously produced the "surprise" wedge tornadoes in the Chicago area but also quite a few in southern Wisconsin. Inexperience and lack of mobile data (my chases often turned into equally unsuccesful hunts for free public wi-fi so I could get a damn radar update) really hurt me in those early days. On the 7th I ran in circles around eastern Dane County while an EF1 QLCS tornado struck near my house north of Stoughton, parallel to and just maybe a few hundred feet from the path of the big F3 of three years prior.

DSC07195.JPGDSC07196.JPGDSC07198.JPG

However the really big story around the Midwest during that time was the heavy rain from the frequent rounds of thunderstorms leading to flash floods followed by widespread and long-lasting river flooding.

DSC07284.JPGDSC07287.JPG

Well, this post turned out a long longer than planned but it does recap what a relentlessly active year '08 indeed was. That and 2011 occurring just three years apart (with 2010, also a quite active spring/summer, in there as well - only '09 was a fairly quiet tornado year among those four) really skewed my perceptions of what tornado seasons should be like.
 
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Get a load of this dumbass
The 6/22/15 Coal City, Illinois tornado definitely warranted a rating higher than EF3
One of my more wild theories is that they're trying to rub it in the faces of people like us to "prove a point" that we really don't know anything about how the EF scale works.
There were several EF5 candidate homes in Cambridge Shores that were seemingly completely ignored.
First of all, if you want to nitpick details about the footage then complain to the videographers. Complaining about it to me does nothing.

Did I ever say that all storm chaser fooage out there is the best? No, and if anything the best footage does come from the general public. But my point is in that terms of the level of polish in regards to things such as stabilization, color saturation, exposure, resolution among other things, professional footage is generally more well-rounded. Simply because not everyone wants to shell out $700 for a copy of Sony Vegas to make minor adjustments to videos.
Then don't tell me the videos I post are worthless. If you don't like em don't watch em, simple as that. IMO all tornado videos have value and many are underappreciated.

That being said, I'm not going to argue because I don't want to be the one who ruins this thread with an argument over whether a video is overexposed or has too much color saturation.
You quoted the wrong person.

If you want to see more cringe from 19-year-old me losing my s**t during the Mayfield survey, look back on the December 2021 thread, some of my posts were flat out hilarious.
 
You quoted the wrong person.

If you want to see more cringe from 19-year-old me losing my s**t during the Mayfield survey, look back on the December 2021 thread, some of my posts were flat out hilarious.
I used to think that Greenfield was an EF5, like above Greensburg and Joplin lmfao. I also had some of the worst takes ever but I can’t remember them.
Just remembered them.

  1. Moshannon was stronger than Wheatland (it wasn’t).
  2. Red Rock is stronger than Piedmont 2011 (just cuz it also (allegedly) toppled an oil rig too doesn’t mean that it was equal).
  3. Marion and Harper were the strongest of 2000-10 (Parkersburg chilling just there)
  4. El Reno 2013 could’ve caused EF5 damage (only thing even remotely indicative of EF5 is the Twistex car (RIP btw))
  5. Henryville is EF5 (just no. only swept away poorly built and unanchored homes)
  6. Tri-State is overrated and only had that much deaths because the building quality (below WILL prove me wrong, heres the most impressive feats: Peabody 18 tipple toppled and dragged 50yds NE in Caldwell/West Frankfort, M&O yards in Murphysboro, H.Z Heinz Factory in Princeton, Price grain elevator in Griffin, dislodged Lick Creek Church foundation in rural Illinois, leveled many schools across its path, ripped up railroad tracks, damaged 3 storm shelters, damaged foundations in De Soto and West Frankfort, toppled Orient 2 water tower in West Frankfort, debarked an entire forest of persimmons and sassafras, about as strong as mesquite in rural Illinois, etc)




Also. TRI STATE MAP IS COMPLETE! SEGMENTS WILL BE POSTED LATER
IMG_2133.jpeg
Stats of the TST:
Peak Width: ~1.9 miles south of McLeansboro
Longest path in 1 state: Missouri (94.2 miles) (or Illinois if you want something 100% accurate, being 93.3 miles)
Path length: 221.9 miles (or 184.6 miles for 100% accuracy after Annapolis)
Speed: 62mph (73mph max) Just saying this for the sake of it
Fatalities: >742 (>800 if counting fires victims)
Highest windspeeds (instant): 300+ in Murphysboro, De Soto, West Frankfort, Rural Illinois, and Griffin.
 
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What are the coordinates for these?
Apologies for the late response, but here they are in order: (These may not be perfect, I just copy and pasted from a damage points map I have)

37°35'54"N 99°17'24"W
37°35'59"N 99°17'27"W
37°36'00"N 99°17'26"W (landed in someone’s living room)
37°36'01"N 99°17'26"W
37°36'04"N 99°17'33"W
37°36'04"N 99°17'37"W
37°36'06"N 99°17'32"W (landed in the remains of the south wing of Greensburg High School)

Here are others that I know of:
37°37'15"N 99°18'36"W (Large tank that landed north of town, possibly a grain storage bin)
37°30'18"N 99°19'11"W (Oil tank that landed on someone’s farmstead south of town)

There is also this storage bin that I initially mistook for one of the tanks that originated south of town but actually came from the grain elevator. This was quite an impressive instance of damage in itself. The storage bin was reportedly fully loaded to capacity with grain, weighing around 25 tons. It was blown approximately 500 yards to the west before coming to rest in a row of completely stripped and debarked trees. The coordinates for this tank are 37°36'37"N 99°17'54"W
Here’s a photo of it as well.
IMG_2390.jpeg
 
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