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8.17 mi (13.15 km) 800 yd (730 m) This high-end EF1 tornado collapsed part of the roof of an outbuilding, partially unroofed two homes, and snapped or uprooted numerous trees. [11] EF0 NNW of Minden to S of Henderson: Rusk: TX: 18:06–18:13
880 yd (800 m) 3 deaths – A large and intense cone tornado touched down northwest of Perryton and moved southeastward toward town. The tornado first crossed Loop 143 and struck a mobile home park, completely destroying multiple mobile homes, killing one person, and igniting a fire in the remaining rubble.
800 yd (730 m) This tornado touched down south of Jefferson just after the previous tornado lifted, damaging a feedlot before crossing I-29 . The roof and gutters of a house and the walls and roof of at least two storage equipment buildings were severely damaged, a road sign was damaged, several grain bins were either blown over or crushed ...
11.3 mi (18.2 km) 800 yd (730 m) 1 death – This strong tornado rapidly developed and intensified before striking Hamilton at high-end EF2 strength, causing major damage to homes and other structures. Several frame homes were left with only interior rooms standing, and mobile homes were destroyed, along with a fire station building.
8.1 mi (13.0 km) 750 yd (690 m) Mobile homes and outbuildings were destroyed, and frame homes were damaged to a lesser degree. Two metal shipping containers were thrown 50 yards, while a school bus, several cars, tractors, and a dump truck were rolled as well. A bulldozer was dragged, and power poles were snapped.
A destructive tornado outbreak struck a wide swath of the Southern and Eastern United States as well as Canada on November 15 and 16, 1989. It produced at least 40 tornadoes and caused 30 deaths as a result of two deadly tornadoes. The most devastating event was the Huntsville, Alabama F4 tornado, which killed 21 on the afternoon of November 15.
33°16′N 82°53′W / . 33.26°N 82.89°W. / 33.26; -82.89 ( Sparta (Feb. 18, EF3) 0348 – 0403. 10.4 mi (16.7 km) 500 yd (460 m) 1 death - A church, two site-built homes, and four mobile homes were destroyed and hundreds of trees were downed. The fatality took place in one of the mobile homes while three others were injured as well.
On October 5–6, 2010, a destructive series of thunderstorms struck Arizona, resulting in the state's largest tornado outbreak and its costliest weather disaster on record. Spawned by a nearby cold-core low, successive hailstorms in Phoenix and surrounding locations on October 5 caused damage to thousands of homes, businesses, and vehicles.