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Tornado outbreak of November 27â€
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The tornado outbreak November 27-30, 2016, is a four-day tornado outbreak that greatly affects the Southern United States, and also affects Iowa and Nebraska to a lesser extent. The strongest tornado of the event affected Alabama and Tennessee on the afternoon of November 29 and entered the early hours of the morning of November 30. Overall, the epidemic produced 48 tornadoes, killed six people, and injured many others.


Video Tornado outbreak of November 27-30, 2016



Meteorological synopsis

On November 27, the storm system produced two EF0 and EF1 in South Central Nebraska, causing minor damage. On November 28, the Hurricane Prediction Center (SPC) issued an increased risk of bad weather for Louisiana and Mississippi. Only one tornado landed in the threat area, a short EF0 left in the fields near Marksville, Louisiana. However, the low surface associated with the system produces several EF0 tornadoes in Iowa. Minor damage occurred in the towns of Radcliffe and Parkersburg, the latter destroyed by the EF5 tornado in May 2008.

The next day, SPC issues Medium risk to central Mississippi and parts of Louisiana, Alabama, and Tennessee. This includes a large risk area of ​​10% hatching for tornadoes, and a smaller 15% hatch risk area for tornadoes in northern Mississippi. Throughout the afternoon and evening, several supercell storms were developed. Hail and wind struck Mississippi, and some EF1 tornadoes caused minor to moderate damage in rural states. After sunset, the event quickly expanded into a significant outbreak as an intensified superkell storm pushed into Alabama, and significant tornadoes began to touch downward. An EF2 tornado near Belgreen snaps many trees and injures one person when a house is damaged and shifts on its foundation. Two EF2 tornadoes move through Winston County and destroy or destroy many houses, mobile homes, and outbuildings, and also take many trees and power lines near Arley and Double Springs. An EF2 tornado touches Monte Sano Mountain in eastern Huntsville, breaks and subverts many trees, and destroys many homes as it passes through several subdivisions, some of which have torn roofs. The riding arena was also destroyed by the Huntsville area tornado. An EF3 tornado passes near the towns of Danville and Neel, causing major structural damage to industrial buildings, homes and fire stations. A motorcycle shop was flattened, vehicles thrown, and several mobile homes were also completely destroyed. Around midnight and into the early hours of November 30, the storm moved to northeastern Alabama and southern Tennessee. The powerful EF3 tornado ripped through Rosalie city and north of Ider, killing four people and wounding nine others. The Rosalie/Ider tornado destroys homes and mobile homes, churches and businesses along its path. A shopping plaza in Rosalie is flattened by a tornado, and a daycare center near Ider is reduced to a naked slab. Further north, powerful tornadoes impacted communities in Tennessee, including the EF3 that ravaged the town of Ocoee. The Ocoee post and firefighters were destroyed, two people were killed in the city, a cell phone tower and a truss metal tower were demolished, and 20 people were injured. A high-end EF2 tornado struck Athens, destroying some businesses and homes produced, severely damaging a large church complex, and wounding 20 people. Some houses suffered major structural damage and the double car house was completely destroyed by a high-end EF2 tornado passing near Whitwell and Dunlap. After sunrise, additional weaker tornadoes landed in Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, and South Carolina. These include some short tornadoes that cause mild to moderate damage in and around Atlanta. An upscale EF1 drowned many trees and destroyed many homes in Simpsonville, South Carolina as well before the outbreak ended.

Maps Tornado outbreak of November 27-30, 2016



Confirmed tornado

Events November 27

Events November 28

Events 29 November

Events November 30


November 30, 2016 Tornadoes
src: www.weather.gov


Note


GOES Hot Stuff
src: goes.gsfc.nasa.gov


References

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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