speedbump305
Member
Ah okay!It's always been at #11 since the list's inception, I was just confirming it was still at that spot.
Speaking of Hackleburg, the 15th anniversary of April 27, 2011 is coming up soon. Time really does fly by.
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Ah okay!It's always been at #11 since the list's inception, I was just confirming it was still at that spot.


















Vilonia is essentially Arkansas' version of Smithville. It is very high on my list in terms of strength.View attachment 52106
The River Plantation Neighborhood
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The Hook Restaurant before and after. Only a few blocks from the E Wicker St. EF5 candidate home.
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Another view of the E Wicker St. Home
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An area where mature trees were ripped out by the root ball and tossed considerable distance
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A grove of debarked trees acted as a dam where a river of debris piled up
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This photo is actually from Enderlin, North Dakota (June 20th, 2025)An area where mature trees were ripped out by the root ball and tossed considerable distance
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Stunned that absolutely no discussion on the infamous Tri-State tornado has taken place today. So many towns completely gone from the sheer violence of this tornado. Some of the damage in Murphysboro never ceases to amaze me.
I reckon if you mentally take off at least one F-category from what the more extreme descriptions imply you'll be closer to the mark more often than not.There was also an unconfirmed tornado, mentioned in a comment in Locomusic's Enigma article, that hit and apparently largely destroyed the town of Norlina, North Carolina. That one actually was potentially violent if it was legit and the implied scale of damage accurate. Not a trace of it on any map I've seen of the outbreak so far.
EDIT: Not my first mention of that one, either!
I know both people in these tweets; Blue’s research is solid (Newspapers.com) but I’m not convinced that the sources they take from are actually giving the truth. I tried to point out to them that old newspapers have a long history of exaggerating tornado damage descriptions (sometimes outright fabricating information as well) and was iirc brushed off. Not in a bad way though.
I honestly kinda like the rise of amateur research in the field of tornadoes. It opens the door to so many new possible research methods and ideas, and I’m all here for it.
Not sure I agree with this. It seems to be one of the best documented tornado events of the era (and for many years before and afterwards). We've got sufficient records that people have done detailed damage point documentation.Remains (and probably always will) quite the meteorological enigma given the nature of tornado observations and damage surveying at the time.
IMO it is, and Tri-State proved it. The consistent heading of damage (and IIIRC the intensity of the damage) before/after the big MO gap leads me to believe that it kept on truckin' through that whole area. I agree with Locomusic's track length - 222 miles.I just don't believe a single tornado track well in excess of 200 miles is physically possible.
I reckon if you mentally take off at least one F-category from what the more extreme descriptions imply you'll be closer to the mark more often than not.
I would expect that more intensive research should uncover more weaker tornadoes, so I'd be sceptical of the claim of 75 significant - that's the same as April 27. That said it's likely that he's documented ones that weren't previously noticed. IMO for these old outbreaks discerning the extent and numbers (by not joining up seperate paths) is probably more useful for the historical record than rating intensities.
I don't think newspapers usually made things up whole cloth, though they'd often report rumours, and it was a lot harder documenting and verifying things back then. That said one of the more commonly cited examples of a severe tornado event in Australia has been, in my opinion, not only exaggerated based on text (rather than pictures, which are available), but I'm sceptical it was actually a tornado at all.
This is perhaps the best view I’ve seen of the Enderlin tornado and its parent barrel mesocyclone and it is incredible.
Someone has posted on Reddit saying this is (or was at least attributed to be) the second Tanner tornado from the Super Outbreak:
The source seems to be Hartsfield, R. J., & Garr, R. (1974). April 3, 1974: The Alabama Tornadoes. I wonder of anyone knows of a copy.
Like the well known picture of the Stratton tornado. Not much rain obscuring that lovely structure.






Given it's 3/21 I think it's appropriate to mention this one here today:
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1999 Bridge Creek–Moore tornado - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org