That pic looks really similar to Moore 2013. I can't find the exact picture that reminds me of it, but I know it's somewhere out there.
That pic looks really similar to Moore 2013. I can't find the exact picture that reminds me of it, but I know it's somewhere out there.
I think so. I believe it was from the video that had that thumbnail.This one?View attachment 28796
Well I wouldn’t say it isn’t possible.Obviously no, it isn't possible for a tornado to lift an entire foundation base out of the ground.
What likely happened is that homes were swept away with such source sections of the foundation were either pulled and/or ripped off with the debris. Similar phenomena was observed with Hackleburg and Smithville.
There's a fair amount of stuff out there, but most of the damage just wasn't all that impressive (relatively speaking). The whole path was kinda weird and patchy with a couple small spots of F3+ mixed in. This video has some pretty good shots:For some reason it's easier to find pics from the 1913 as opposed to the 1975 Omaha tornado, haven't seen lots of these before.
not sure where your getting these images but , try checking Lat:46.957 , Lon:-76.581The 16/4/1998 Lawrence tornado family is one I like to use to test the various processing formulae that I use to try find tracks (which are NDVI, EVI, EVI2 and NDII. The presets for True Colour, NDVI and NDWI sometimes also work). The Wayne County tornado produced a very strong and wide ground scar so if what you're doing works, it should be very obvious.
View attachment 28805
One thing apparent is the offical start and end points aren't accurate. The end and start of the Wayne and Lawrence tornadoes was closer, with the Lawrence tornado further southwest and the Wayne tornado slightly further north. I can't really make out the end of the Lawrence tornado, but it was at least half a mile and probably closer a mile longer than the offical 19.3. It's hard to tell whether some marks are actually part of the tornado track or are something else, but I think the Wayne tornado may have begun further west than thought and could be closer to 35 than the offical 30 miles. Lastly the start of the Maury County tornado appears to be a mile northwest of the offical start, and much closer to the (hard to see) end of the Lawrence tornado.
View attachment 28808
There's also a possible undocumented tornado in Hardin County, to the south of the Wayne County tornado starting near the Tennessee River. I'm not sure it's a tornado mark at all, but it looks like one and I couldn't see it on images from the previous year:
View attachment 28809
I'm very much at the 'barely knows anything' level of doing this. The main thing I use is the stretch function to try improve the contrast and rely on the website to do the rest. I often end up with images that only barely show the track while having this odd greenish cast which I don't know how to get rid of, and some images - especially those taken closer to winter - simply refuse to improve their contrast. Someone who really knows what they're doing would be able to scale the data properly to a colour scale. Some people even write code that can actually discern changes between two dates, which would be incredibly useful, but it's beyond me to make what's available work.
not sure where your getting these images but , try checking Lat:46.957 , Lon:-76.581
View attachment 28812
sometimes before 1985 , appears to have a long track tornado that went over 110+ miles
Any photos from the Berlin or Newkirk?The Hudsonville outbreak sequence was actually pretty significant. I've got a pretty good start on the 4/3 Michigan tornadoes so that isn't a problem. I've got some stuff on Davenport-Drumright, OK and a little bit on the huge Newkirk-Grenola-Toronto family, but not nearly enough to cover it the way I want. That family alone featured multiple large, violent tornadoes (including a possible F5), and that's not even mentioning the F4 that struck parts of OK-KS-MO, the Berlin, WI F4, the Lexington, TN F4 and a handful of other F3s. It'd be manageable if I knew I could find enough photos and whatnot but I suspect some of those are gonna be really tough.
The only break w/Hudsonville is with the Holland F4, which is officially counted as the same tornado. The Grand Traverse Bay F4 may've had a break southwest of Lake Ann and possibly another up around Lake Leelanau but I'm not sure yet. The Bangor-Lowell F3 probably had a break southeast of Wayland, around where the path gets kinda squirrely.
What sites do you use to find this stuff?The 16/4/1998 Lawrence tornado family is one I like to use to test the various processing formulae that I use to try find tracks (which are NDVI, EVI, EVI2 and NDII. The presets for True Colour, NDVI and NDWI sometimes also work). The Wayne County tornado produced a very strong and wide ground scar so if what you're doing works, it should be very obvious.
View attachment 28805
One thing apparent is the offical start and end points aren't accurate. The end and start of the Wayne and Lawrence tornadoes was closer, with the Lawrence tornado further southwest and the Wayne tornado slightly further north. I can't really make out the end of the Lawrence tornado, but it was at least half a mile and probably closer a mile longer than the offical 19.3. It's hard to tell whether some marks are actually part of the tornado track or are something else, but I think the Wayne tornado may have begun further west than thought and could be closer to 35 than the offical 30 miles. Lastly the start of the Maury County tornado appears to be a mile northwest of the offical start, and much closer to the (hard to see) end of the Lawrence tornado.
View attachment 28808
There's also a possible undocumented tornado in Hardin County, to the south of the Wayne County tornado starting near the Tennessee River. I'm not sure it's a tornado mark at all, but it looks like one and I couldn't see it on images from the previous year:
View attachment 28809
I'm very much at the 'barely knows anything' level of doing this. The main thing I use is the stretch function to try improve the contrast and rely on the website to do the rest. I often end up with images that only barely show the track while having this odd greenish cast which I don't know how to get rid of, and some images - especially those taken closer to winter - simply refuse to improve their contrast. Someone who really knows what they're doing would be able to scale the data properly to a colour scale. Some people even write code that can actually discern changes between two dates, which would be incredibly useful, but it's beyond me to make what's available work.
I get it from Sentinel Hub. Though I have just run out of 'requests' on my free account, so I can't download photos without credits until next month. Protip: get your imagery the way you want, then log in, download, logout.What sites do you use to find this stuff?
How far was that tank tossed?
If I may piggy back off of this, on the note of Palm Sunday, Loco, did you ever find pictures or much information on the Rockaway, Ohio tornado?How far was that tank tossed?
I don't remember the context but I don't think it was, it looks like it's still sitting upright. I'll have to check and see if I have any more info though.How far was that tank tossed?
A bit, yeah. These are all the same property not far from Rockaway; it was a house with a garage/machine shop next door (first two are before/after of the house):If I may piggy back off of this, on the note of Palm Sunday, Loco, did you ever find pictures or much information on the Rockaway, Ohio tornado?
Damn, any more impressive images from that event?We really need like a repository of photos for different tornadoes lol. I've got like a thousand photos from El Reno '11 but I dunno what has and hasn't been posted before.
Any damage pics from Toledo?I don't remember the context but I don't think it was, it looks like it's still sitting upright. I'll have to check and see if I have any more info though.
A bit, yeah. These are all the same property not far from Rockaway; it was a house with a garage/machine shop next door (first two are before/after of the house):
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Concrete bridge pillars torn up:
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Another property:
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A house where a woman was killed:
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