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More information EFU, EF0 ...
EFU | EF0 | EF1 | EF2 | EF3 | EF4 | EF5 | Total |
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0 | 4 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 8 |
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More information Tornadoes ...
Tornadoes | |||||||
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April 14, 2012 | |||||||
EF1 | S of Waynoka | Major, Woods | 36.49°N 98.88°W / 36.49; -98.88 (Waynoka (Apr. 14, EF1)) | 0006 | 7.2 miles (11.6 km) | Equipment at an oil field was damaged, causing a fire. | |
EF0 | E of Waynoka to NE of Hopeton | Woods | 36.59°N 98.70°W / 36.59; -98.70 (Hopeton (Apr. 14, EF0)) | 0030 | 9 miles (14 km) | No damage was reported. | |
EF1 | W of Cherokee | Alfalfa | 36.69°N 98.52°W / 36.69; -98.52 (Dacoma (Apr. 14, EF1)) | 0047 | 10 miles (16 km) | Large and visually intense tornado avoided well built structures. Farm equipment and several outbuildings were damaged. Two large steel barns were destroyed. | |
EF0 | NW of Cherokee to NW of Amorita | Alfalfa | 36.78°N 98.39°W / 36.78; -98.39 (Amorita (Apr. 14, EF0)) | 0057 | 12 miles (19 km) | Tornado occurred simultaneously with the previous tornado. Several trees and outbuildings were damaged. | |
EF1 | E of Byron to NE of Danville, KS | Alfalfa, Grant, Harper (KS) | 36.90°N 98.22°W / 36.90; -98.22 (Byron (Apr. 14, EF1)) | 0119 | 36.6 miles (58.9 km) | Large stovepipe tornado. Several homes and outbuildings were damaged and vehicles were destroyed. Numerous trees and power poles were also downed. | |
May 19, 2013 | |||||||
EF0 | SW of Wellington | Sumner | 37.14°N 97.49°W / 37.14; -97.49 (Perth (May 19, EF0)) | 2112 | Unknown | Trained spotter reported a tornado on the ground. | |
EF? | WSW of South Haven | Sumner | 37.05°N 97.40°W / 37.05; -97.40 (South Haven (May 19, EF?)) | 2136 | Brief | Brief tornado reported by trained spotter. Confirmed but unrated. | |
May 31, 2013 | |||||||
EF5 | SW of El Reno to W of Yukon | Canadian | 35.49°N 98.11°W / 35.49; -98.11 (El Reno (May 31, EF5)) | 2303 – 2343 | 16.2 miles (26.1 km) | 2.6 miles (4.2 km) | ~7 deaths – Exceptionally large multiple-vortex wedge tornado, the largest tornado ever recorded, destroyed many structures, flipped vehicles (many of which were on Interstate 40), and downed trees and power lines. It initially moved southeast, turned east, then turned northeast, and finally turned east along Interstate 40 before lifting. Numerous people were injured in vehicles along the interstate, which was where the deaths occurred.[1] Multiple storm chasers were caught in the path of the tornado on US 81; Tim Samaras, his son Paul and his team member Carl Young were killed, the first storm chasers to be killed by a storm.[2] Many Cars, including that of Mike Bettes of The Weather Channel, were lofted off the highway. Multiple injuries reported. Exact direct death toll is undetermined at this time due to flooding at the same time plus some may have been indirect deaths. |
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- "20130531's Storm Reports (1200 UTC – 1159 UTC)". Storm Prediction Center. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. May 31, 2013. Retrieved May 31, 2013.
- Anica Padilla, Tak Landrock (2013-06-02). "Colorado storm chaser Tim Samaras killed in Oklahoma tornado along with son, longtime partner". The Denver Channel. Retrieved 2013-06-03.