Marshal79344
Member
- Messages
- 366
- Location
- Chicago, IL
Seeing the Jonesboro Tornado come out of the skies on live television was so heart-wrenching. I interacted with someone on a Twitter thread who said that there were some mountains near Jonesboro which contributed to a slight increase in directional shear values, which helped that particular supercell to drop a tornado of that caliber and finally stop producing tornadoes after it left the influence area of the mountains. Something similar happened with a long-tracked supercell thunderstorm on April 8, 2020, that dropped the long-tracked Harrisburg, AR tornado after it came into contact with these locally backed winds. Two other examples occurred in 1968 and 1973, the 1968 one was so much worse though. The 1968 Tornado took a track near a highway and moved through southern Jonesboro at the height of rush hour, resulting in 35 fatalities, almost all of which were in cars. Here are some photos from the 1968 Tornado:
A subdivision that vaporized

Another view of the same subdivision

A school that was destroyed

A subdivision that vaporized

Another view of the same subdivision

A school that was destroyed
