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Tornadoes of 2011

This page documents the tornadoes and tornado outbreaks of 2011. Extremely destructive tornadoes form most frequently in the United States, Bangladesh, Brazil and Eastern India, but they can occur almost anywhere under the right conditions. Tornadoes also appear regularly in neighboring southern Canada during the Northern Hemisphere's summer season, and somewhat regularly in Europe, Asia, and Australia.

Tornadoes of 2011
(map data)
Graph of the 2011 United States tornado count
TimespanJanuary 1 – December 22, 2011
Maximum rated tornadoEF5 tornado
Tornadoes in U.S.1,706[1]
Damage (U.S.)~$26.54 billion (Record costliest)[2]
Fatalities (U.S.)553[3] (>5,370 injuries)
Fatalities (worldwide)571
Tornadoes of 2011 in the United States

There were 1,706 tornadoes confirmed in the United States in 2011. It was the second most active year on record, with only 2004 having more confirmed tornadoes. 2011 was an exceptionally destructive and deadly year for tornadoes; worldwide, at least 571 people perished due to tornadoes: 12 in Bangladesh, two in South Africa, one each in New Zealand, the Philippines, Russia and Canada, and 553 in the United States (compared to 564 deaths in the prior ten years combined). Due mostly to several extremely large tornado outbreaks in the middle and end of April and in late May, the year finished well above average in almost every category, with six EF5 tornadoes and nearly enough total tornado reports to eclipse the mark of 1,817 tornadoes recorded in 2004, the current record year for total number of tornadoes.

The 553 confirmed fatalities marks the second-most tornadic deaths in a single year in U.S. history, behind only 1925 in terms of fatalities attributed to tornadic activity. Most of the damage and over two-thirds of the year's total fatalities were caused by a late-April Super Outbreak and an EF5 tornado that struck Joplin, Missouri in late-May.[4]

Synopsis edit

Fatal United States tornadoes in 2011
class=notpageimage|
Approximate touchdown location of killer tornadoes in 2011
Further information
Total fatalities: 553

An ongoing outbreak at the end of 2010 continued into the first three hours of 2011. During that period seven tornadoes touched down in Mississippi. However, during the remainder of the month, tornadic activity was suppressed by a cold air mass, with nine additional tornadoes – all weak – taking place.[5] This inactivity continued through much of February before a pattern shift. Two consecutive outbreaks took place on February 25 and 27 – 28, producing a combined 55 tornadoes. Overall, 63 tornadoes were confirmed in the month, making it the fourth most active February on record.[6] Activity in March was split between the start and end of the month, and with a total of 75 tornadoes touching down, it ran slightly above average for the month.

In early April, a prolific severe weather event produced 46 tornadoes and more than 1,200 reports of wind damage, setting the tone for the month.[7] A nearly continuous series of major tornado outbreaks followed thereafter in the remainder of April, including two extreme multi-day tornado outbreaks that were among the largest in U.S. history (one of them also one of the deadliest and the costliest) and two other large tornado outbreaks, resulting in an incredibly active month from start to finish; it was the most active month for tornadoes on record and by an extremely large margin the most active April, with 773 tornadoes touching down.[8]

In an abrupt reversal, the activity did not continue into May (normally the most active month for tornadoes), however, and the first half was remarkably quiet, becoming one of the least active Mays on record by the middle of the month. The lack of activity continued for three weeks until a tornado outbreak sequence began on May 21, and a deadly tornado hit Joplin, Missouri the following day in the event. The outbreak sequence continued for the next several days, with 241 confirmed touchdowns, bringing the month of May near average.

The first day of June brought a rare outbreak into New England, where several tornadoes touched down, some of which were destructive. However, another reversal took place afterward and much of June was fairly quiet, with the exception of an active period in the third week of the month which included a moderate tornado outbreak. July was also relatively quiet for the most part with below normal activity, occurring mostly within the northern Plains. August was more quiet with below normal activity and only 59 confirmed tornadoes. September and October were also below average. November was somewhat more active, primarily due to two moderate outbreaks in the first half of the month. December saw a return to inactivity for most of the month, but there was a small outbreak of 13 tornadoes on December 22, making it the final tornado outbreak of the year.

Events edit

United States yearly total edit

Confirmed tornadoes by Enhanced Fujita rating
EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5 Total
0 798 626 198 61 17 6 1706

January edit

There were 29 tornadoes reported in the US in January, of which 16 were confirmed.[5]

January 1 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 0 4 1 2 0 0

A late-season deadly tornado outbreak continued through the early hours of January 1, with seven tornadoes touching down in Mississippi over three hours. The strongest of these, rated EF3 with winds of 145 mph (233 km/h), reached 0.75 mi (1.21 km) in width along its 23.45 mi (37.74 km) track and caused significant damage along Mississippi Highway 19. Several structures were damaged or destroyed and two people were injured. Near Mississippi Highway 35, thousands of trees were uprooted by the tornado. Another EF3 touched down near Macon, damaging or destroying several structures and one person was injured. Overall damage in the state from tornadoes amounted to $10.4 million.[9]

January 24–25 (Europe) edit

FU F0 F1 F2 F3 F4 F5
0 0 2 1 0 0 0

In late January, three tornadoes touched down in eastern Europe: two in Turkey and one in Greece. In Kemalpaşa, Turkey, an F1 tornado caused the wall of an industrial building to collapse. Several other structures sustained roof damage. The strongest of these tornadoes was an F2 that touched down in northern Rhodes, destroying small structures and killing several heads of cattle. Hail up to 5 cm (2.0 in) in diameter fell in some places, damaging farmland and greenhouses. Accumulations of hail also reached 15 cm (5.9 in) in Mersin Province, Turkey.[10]

February edit

There were 61 tornadoes reported in the US in February, of which 68 were confirmed. The higher final total is due to a large number of late reports.[5]

In addition to the events listed below, there was an F2 tornado in Greece on February 23 that destroyed a restaurant[10] and a brief, weak tornado associated with Cyclone Carlos which struck the town of Karratha in Western Australia.[11]

February 24 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 3 6 5 0 0 0

Several tornadoes touched down across parts of the Southern United States. The most significant tornado was in the southeastern part of Nashville, Tennessee where significant damage was reported near Hickory Hollow Mall and near Percy Priest Lake in the evening (with widespread wind damage all across Middle Tennessee), and a tornado emergency was declared shortly thereafter for areas to the northeast in Wilson County where another tornado touched down with injuries. Both tornadoes were rated EF2. Other tornadoes touched down with varying degrees of damage in the Missouri Bootheel, West Tennessee, Mississippi, southwestern Kentucky and parts of Arkansas including three others rated EF2.The overall damage from this system amounted to $1,500,000 [12]

February 27–28 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 11 21 7 1 0 0
 
A home destroyed by an EF2 tornado in Dubois County, Indiana

Another severe weather event developed on February 27 and continued into February 28 across the Midwest and South. While a large portion of the damage was due to damaging straight-line winds, at least 35 tornadoes were reported across several states. The most destructive tornado was in Franklin County, Tennessee on the afternoon of February 28 where one person was killed by an EF2 tornado. It was the first killer tornado of 2011. Another strong tornado, rated EF3, resulted in houses destroyed near Eminence, Kentucky.[13][14] Concentrated tornado activity also occurred in parts of Missouri and Illinois with 22 tornadoes in the region, some as strong as EF2, related to a series of squall lines with many embedded tornadoes. None of those tornadoes resulted in any fatalities. Overall damages from this system amounted to $12,800,000.[15]

March edit

There were 95 tornadoes reported in the US in March, of which 75 were confirmed.[5]

March 5–6 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 7 2 1 0 0 0

One confirmed EF0 tornado hit the town of Crowley, Louisiana. Another reportedly hit Greene County, Mississippi on March 5. It formed in a squall line, which hit portions of Mississippi, Alabama, and Louisiana. A deadly EF2 tornado struck Rayne, Louisiana early that afternoon, killing a mother while she protected her daughter.[16] At least 12 others were injured. Initial assessments indicate that 62 homes were destroyed and 50 more damaged. Two EF0 tornadoes were also confirmed in eastern North Carolina.

March 8–9 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 5 10 5 0 0 0

Several tornadoes touched down once again on March 8 into March 9 from North Texas eastward to the Florida Panhandle, with Louisiana hardest hit. The most destructive tornadoes, rated EF2, touched down just north of New Orleans in St. Tammany Parish.[17]

March 21–23 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 7 4 3 1 0 0

A tornado developed in the afternoon of March 21 near Maxwell, California, and it crossed Interstate 5, but however caused no known damage, as it was on the ground for only a few minutes. The same system produced more severe weather ahead of a dry line across eastern Nebraska, where tornadoes were reported northeast of Omaha. Later, a cluster of supercells began producing tornadoes in south-central Iowa, where a tornado was reported in Greenfield, Iowa, and at least 2 tornadoes were reported near Winterset, Iowa. Several funnel clouds were reported in Des Moines, where there was a possible touchdown. These funnels were associated with the storm that produced the first tornado to hit Greenfield and Winterset.

On March 23, more tornadoes and severe weather developed with the most significant tornadoes touching down in East Tennessee where significant damage was reported. Near Greenback in Blount County, an EF3 tornado was confirmed with severe damage in the area. Another notable tornado touched down in southwestern Pennsylvania, most notably in Hempfield Township, Pennsylvania. It was rated EF2.

March 29–31 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 6 7 0 0 0 0
 
Damage from one of the tornadoes near Tampa.

On March 29, a warm front over the Gulf of Mexico associated with an upper-level low over Texas moved northward into the Gulf Coast States, bringing scattered severe weather.[18] In Louisiana, three tornadoes touched down, including an EF1 which caused a three-story building to collapse.[19] In Mississippi, one person was killed after lightning caused a house fire. A strong microburst also took place in Copiah County, producing winds up to 110 mph (180 km/h).[20] Activity shifted into central Florida on March 30 as a frontal boundary stalled out across the state. During the two-day period, ten tornadoes touched down and a series of squall lines produced widespread wind damage on March 31.[21] Significant damage took place in several communities and damage exceeded $5 million.[22] Seven people were injured when one of the tornadoes hit a local festival.[23]

April edit

There were 875 tornadoes reported in the United States in April, of which 773 were confirmed.[5]

That set a new all-time monthly record, significantly exceeding the previous record of 542 in May 2003 and nearly tripling the old record for April (267 in 1974).[24] In Alabama, the monthly (for April) and yearly record was broken with 89 and 98 tornadoes respectively.[25]

April 4–5 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 9 31 6 0 0 0

Several storms started to develop in the evening on April 3. Storms in Kansas, Missouri, Iowa and Illinois brought severe thunderstorms to the areas. A tornado watch was issued for Iowa and Illinois as the storms rolled through, and later a severe thunderstorm watch for northeastern Illinois and southeastern Wisconsin. However, there were no reported tornadoes.[26] Continuing eastward, the system entered an environment favoring tornadic development. Two tornadoes were reported in Kentucky during the early afternoon, both rated EF2 and resulting in injuries.[7] Near Hopkinsville, a tornado, confirmed by local emergency services, caused significant damage to a manufacturing plant.[27] Numerous buildings were reported to be destroyed, trapping residents within debris.[28] In addition to the tornadoes, there was widespread wind damage (over 1,400 severe weather reports were received by the Storm Prediction Center, with the vast majority being damaging winds) as an extremely large squall line/serial derecho tracked across the southern United States with wind gusts as high as 90 mph (145 km/h) reported across 20 states,[7] killing at least 9 people, one of the deaths was as a result of an EF2 tornado in Dodge County, Georgia. Numerous power outages also took place due to the extensive wind damage. Nearly 100,000 and 147,000 residences lost power in Tennessee and Georgia respectively.[29][30]

April 4 (Bangladesh) edit

During the afternoon of April 4, a powerful tornado struck seven districts in northern Bangladesh. At least 12 people were killed and more than 150 injured as the tornado destroyed hundreds of homes and uprooted large swaths of vegetation.[31]

April 8–11 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 12 26 8 4 1 0
 
Damage from the EF3 Mapleton tornado

A large storm system with an associated frontal boundary moved northward and eastward across the central United States beginning on April 8. While initial severe weather was limited, a lone supercell broke out ahead of a mesoscale convective system in Pulaski County, Virginia on the eastern end of the warm front that evening. Two tornadoes were confirmed, one of which was an EF2 that caused severe damage in Pulaski, Virginia. Numerous houses were damaged and eight people were injured.[32] During the afternoon of April 9, supercells developed along the warm front and tracked through parts of Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia, and North Carolina, generating softball sized hail and eight more tornadoes.[33]

During the evening of April 9, several severe thunderstorms developed across Nebraska, South Dakota and Iowa. A single supercell became tornadic over extreme western Iowa, producing a family of ten tornadoes over the course of five hours.[33] The first was 0.75 mi (1.21 km) wide and struck Mapleton, Iowa,[34] destroying about 100 homes. Due to a 20-minute warning time, no fatalities took place and only 14 to 16 people were injured. Officials blocked off the town and Governor Terry Branstad issued a disaster proclamation for the town.[35]

Additional tornadic activity developed on April 10 across Wisconsin with several more tornadoes reported there.

April 14–16 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 52 81 32 13 0 0
 
The Tushka, Oklahoma tornado.

During the afternoon of April 14, a significant tornado outbreak started setting up. A PDS (Particularly Dangerous Situation) tornado watch was issued for much of eastern Oklahoma.[36] Supercells explosively developed over central Oklahoma. Storm chasers in the region reported several funnel clouds and two touchdowns, neither of which resulted in damage. Several tornadoes were confirmed through storm chaser video and local emergency management services. A large, intense, multiple-vortex tornado caused severe damage in the towns of Atoka and Tushka where many houses were destroyed or flattened. Numerous injuries were reported in the latter of these areas.[37] Two people were killed and 25 more injured in Tushka.[38][39] In Arkansas, 2 people were killed when an EF1 downed a tree which landed on a house.[40][41]

During the late-night hours into the morning of April 15, tornadic activity lessened. However, by the late morning hours, supercell thunderstorms developed again over parts of Mississippi, and tornadoes began to touch down again. A tornado emergency was declared for the northern Jackson metropolitan area as a result at shortly after 11:00 am CDT (1600 UTC). A destructive tornado moved across the area with severe damage and multiple injuries according to WLBT coverage. That afternoon, Mississippi State University spotters confirmed a large tornado in east-central Mississippi and west-central Alabama and another tornado emergency was issued. ABC 33/40 coverage reported that the tornado was 3/4 mile (1.2 km) in width. Over 90 tornado sightings were reported that day and at least eight people were killed in Mississippi and Alabama.

On April 16, another PDS tornado watch, along with a "high risk" alert from the SPC were issued for central and eastern North Carolina. At least 24 died and 135 were seriously injured in what became North Carolina's worst tornado outbreak in 25 years; tornadoes also struck South Carolina, Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania.[42] Twelve of the North Carolina deaths took place in Bertie County; tornado emergencies were issued for Raleigh, Snow Hill, and Wilson at the height of the outbreak. In North Carolina, twelve supercells produced at least 25 tornadoes, with at least 32 counties affected. A total of 21 businesses and 440 homes were destroyed, 63 of those homes in Raleigh; about 92 businesses and 6,189 homes suffered significant damage, 184 of those homes in Raleigh.[42][43][44]

April 19–24 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 61 56 15 1 1 0
 
A house that was completely destroyed at EF4 intensity in the suburbs of St. Louis.

Yet another severe weather event developed across the Midwest and southern Great Plains on April 19 as another dynamic low pressure system tracked across the area. Thunderstorms began in the late afternoon and early evening with large hail and several tornadoes. Significant damage was reported near Bowling Green, Missouri and Girard, Illinois as a result of tornadoes, the latter of which was rated EF3. Another large tornado was reported near Octavia, Oklahoma before the supercells merged into a very large squall line. Overnight, the squall line tracked eastward with widespread wind damage and many embedded tornadoes across several states, a few as strong as EF2 but most were brief and weak. In the early hours of April 20, 2011, a tornado tore through a neighborhood in Oregon, Ohio leaving some significant damage and no injuries. Also, three tornadoes struck New Albany, Indiana, and Jeffersonville, Indiana. Both are cities just north of Louisville, Kentucky[45] On April 22, the outbreak continued with several tornadoes causing damage in the Midwest, the most notable being a violent EF4 that struck St. Louis, Missouri, causing extensive damage. A few more tornadoes were reported on April 23–24, however most did not cause any severe damage, though one EF2 tornado caused structural damage in the town of Bardwell, Kentucky.

Severe weather once again developed across parts of the Midwest on April 22. The hardest-hit area was parts of the St. Louis metropolitan area. A destructive tornado tracked across the region with severe damage in several communities including houses destroyed in communities such as Bridgeton, Ferguson, Florissant, Hazelwood, Maryland Heights and New Melle. Lambert-St. Louis International Airport was hard hit with severe damage to numerous facilities there and injuries reported. Windows were blown out of the terminals there and airplanes were flipped in the field. Concourse C was the hardest hit, taking nearly a year to reopen; it reopened on April 2, 2012.[46][47] The tornado was given a rating of EF4 based on finding of flattened houses in Bridgeton. Following assessments by the local National Weather Service, it was determined that a single tornado tracked for 22 miles (35 km) through parts of Missouri and Illinois, reaching a maximum width of 0.4 miles (0.64 km). Elsewhere, there were several reported tornadoes, including an EF2 which tracked through Henderson, Webster and Union County.[48]

April 25–28 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 134 140 49 22 11 4

Between April 25 and 28, a historic tornado outbreak took place across much of the Southern United States as well as parts of the Midwest and Northeast. With 360 confirmed tornadoes and 324 tornadic fatalities, the outbreak ranks as the largest and one of the worst in United States history. More than three dozen tornadoes were confirmed each day of the event, with 42 on April 25, 55 on April 26, a 24-hour record of 216 on April 27, and 47 on April 28. In terms of violent tornadoes, the event ranks third with 15 EF4/5 storms, behind the 1974 Super Outbreak and 1965 Palm Sunday outbreak.

 
The cyclone responsible for the historic outbreak on April 27.

A large outbreak was possible for April 25–27 as the SPC issued a moderate risk of severe weather for three consecutive days, centered over Arkansas through Tennessee. By the late-afternoon hours of April 25, several tornadoes had been reported across a few states, including two which caused significant damage in Oklahoma and Texas. At 3:25 pm CST (2025 UTC), the SPC issued a PDS tornado watch for much of Arkansas and parts of Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas and Louisiana.[49] Tornadoes were scattered that day until early evening, when an intense tornadic cell tracked near the Little Rock metropolitan area and a tornado emergency was declared for Vilonia, Arkansas. A 0.5-mile (0.80 km) wide EF2 tornado then caused extensive damage in Vilonia. At least four people are known to have died in the town with many more injured.

 
Road surface stripped by an EF5 tornado near Philadelphia, Mississippi.

On April 27, a large tornado struck Tuscaloosa, Alabama, killing 44 people.[50] The Tuscaloosa mayor called the damage "catastrophic." The same tornado hit the northern suburbs of Birmingham, Alabama, shortly thereafter, killing 20 more people. Television reporters in Birmingham, filming the tornado, reported that even from miles away, the funnel was so wide that they could not zoom their cameras out far enough to get the entire funnel into the frame at once. Over 200 tornadoes were reported during the SPC's reporting day of 1200Z April 27 (7:00 am CDT) to 1200Z April 28 (7:00 am CDT).[51] 324 tornadic deaths were confirmed as a result of the outbreak, with as many as 238 in Alabama alone. The overall death toll also includes 32 deaths in Tennessee, 31 in Mississippi, 14 in Georgia, 5 in Arkansas, and 4 in Virginia, according to state officials.

On April 27, President Barack Obama approved Governor Robert Bentley's request for emergency federal assistance including search and rescue support.

On April 28, 2011, the National Weather Service sent out people to survey the damage; however, with the large number of tornadoes across Alabama, the reports were not finalized for months. By April 30, the death toll from the event (including death tolls from flooding and other severe weather) stood at more than 340 people across six states.

On a lesser note, an F0 tornado (the Fujita scale was still used in Canada) downed trees and ripped siding off store buildings in Fergus, Ontario on April 27.[52]


May edit

There were 370 tornadoes reported in the United States in May, of which 326 were confirmed.

In addition to the events listed below, two other tornadoes, one in the Philippines and Taiwan, also touched down.[53] The former of these resulted in significant damage and killed one person in Calumpit, Bulacan.[54]

May 3 (New Zealand) edit

 
The Albany tornado caused significant damage to roofs of buildings in its path.

On May 3, a line of showers and thunderstorms tracked into the Northland from the Tasman Sea, bringing unsettled weather to much of the region. The Meteorological Service of New Zealand Limited (MetService) mentioned the possibility of strong thunderstorms being embedded within the line, producing small hail and gusty winds. Significant upward motion in the atmosphere developed in the region surrounding Auckland, prompting the MetService to issue a high-risk of thunderstorms in the area. With low-level wind shear and helicity, the possibility of tornadic activity was present. At 2:55 pm NZST, a hook echo was apparent on the weather radar, indicating strong rotation and a likely tornado.[55]

Several minutes later, around 3:00 pm NZST, a tornado struck the Auckland suburb of Albany. With winds estimated at 125 mph (201 km/h), the tornado ranked as a high-end EF2 and caused considerable damage along a 3.1 mi (5.0 km) long track in the area.[56][57] Several cars were tossed up to 20 ft (6.1 m) in the air by the storm and pieces of iron roofing were reportedly seen 300 ft (91 m) above the ground.[58] A total of 50 homes sustained varying degrees of damage along the tornado's track.[59] The most severe damage took place at a local shopping mall where large portions of the roof were torn off. One person was killed and at least 20 others were injured here.[58] Damage estimates from the storm were placed in the tens of millions.[59]

May 9–14 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 22 7 1 0 0 0
 
This transmission tower near Wall, South Dakota was bent by an EF2 tornado

On May 9, a strong upper-level ridge over the Mississippi River Valley produced a narrow axis of extreme instability from eastern Nebraska to central South Dakota. In light of this, the SPC issued a slight-risk of severe weather for much of South Dakota and Iowa as well as parts of Minnesota, Missouri, and Nebraska.[60] Enhanced by a mid-level jet, wind shear in the region increased, providing a more favorable environment for strong thunderstorms.[61] During the course of the day, three tornadoes struck South Dakota. The strongest, an EF2 in Pennington County, crumpled a transmission tower.[62] Continuing into May 10, the system slowly moved eastward, shifting the center of severe activity in the Upper-Plains to Minnesota.[63] Thunderstorms in the state mainly produced large hail, measured up to 2.5 in (6.4 cm) in diameter. However, one EF1 tornado touched down, causing significant damage to a garage.[64]

On May 11, an upper-level low moved out of the Four Corners Region into the Central Plains, prompting a moderate-risk of severe weather from the SPC. The main threat from these storms was expected to be large hail, with a considerable region being given a 45 percent chance of hail.[65] Later that day, the moderate-risk was discontinued and replaced by a large area under a slight-risk. According to the SPC, the issuance of a moderate risk was due to an "improper handling of ongoing storms."[66] Tornadic activity during the event was scattered and consisted of short-lived events. In all, 16 tornadoes touched down across five states, Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Texas. In Iowa, twin EF1 tornadoes struck the city of Lenox, damaging several homes.[67] Continuing eastward, the low became diffuse and produced scattered severe weather on May 12, 13, and 14, with tornadoes confirmed in Nebraska, Illinois, Louisiana, and Ohio.[68]

May 21–26 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 109 86 31 8 3 2

On May 21, a small system of thunderstorms began to develop in Brown County, Kansas. At the same time, another system formed to the southeast of Emporia, Kansas. The Brown County system developed produced a couple tornadoes over Shawnee County, Kansas, including one near Topeka that caused minor damage. Meanwhile, the Emporia system moved to the northeast, where an EF3 tornado heavily damaged the town of Reading, Kansas. One person was killed, several others were injured, and at least 20 houses were destroyed.[69] Several other tornadoes touched down in the region that evening, all of which were in the EF0–EF1 range.[70]

 
St. John's Regional Medical Center in Joplin after the tornado.
 
A debarked tree just north El Reno, Oklahoma with various debris, including a car, piled at its base and severe ground scouring in the foreground.

A moderate risk of severe weather was issued for much of the Midwest south to Oklahoma for May 22. The first tornadic supercell that day developed in the mid-afternoon hours over the western Twin Cities with a swath of damage, especially in and around Minneapolis, Minnesota.[71] An intense tornado also tracked towards Harmony, Minnesota that afternoon and a tornado emergency was issued. Late that afternoon, at about 5:15 p.m. CDT (2215 UTC), a very large and intense multiple-vortex tornado resulted in catastrophic damage in Joplin, Missouri. Many houses and businesses were flattened and some even were blown away in Joplin, the main hospital was heavily damaged and many people were reported to have been trapped in destroyed houses. The Weather Channel video showed entire communities flattened. Early reports suggested there were at least 125 fatalities,[72][73] but the death toll was later confirmed to be much higher, exactly 158, with another 1,000+ injured.[74] This tornado was given a rating of EF5.

Late in the afternoon on May 24, supercells began forming over western Kansas and Oklahoma, as the National Weather Service predicted a dangerous tornado outbreak. As a line of powerful cells began to take shape, trained spotters reported large tornadoes near El Reno, Oklahoma and in rural Grady County, Oklahoma. One of these swept from Binger to Guthrie, destroying many homes and causing at least nine fatalities. This tornado was rated an EF5, the sixth of the year and second of the outbreak sequence. Three other EF4 tornadoes developed among the many other tornadoes that day.

At around 10:00 p.m. EDT on May 25, an EF3 tornado hit the city of Bedford, Indiana. U.S. Route 50 was temporarily closed due to heavy debris. Also, a tornado had reportedly touched down in Keyser, WV and tracked as far as Berkeley Springs. Three tornadoes also hit the Sacramento Valley of California, north of Sacramento. One tornado rated at EF1, struck east of Artois uprooting hundreds of almond trees, and causing damage to farm equipment and roofing materials. Another tornado rated at EF1, struck south of Durham, uprooting thousands of almond trees, destroying an out building, and damaging a barn. A tornado rated at EF2, struck northwest of Oroville, causing heavy damage to a ranch and a garage.[75] On May 26, strong thunderstorms travelled through the Cumberland Valley in South Central Pennsylvania with reports of EF1 tornadoes near Carlisle, Mechanicsburg, and Hershey. Tornadoes also destroyed the setup for the Harrisburg ArtsFest scheduled to take place the following weekend.

May 29–31 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 9 9 3 0 0 0

Tornado activity continued across the Northern United States near the end of May, with a couple rounds of storms working eastward and producing scattered tornadoes. On May 29, three EF1 tornadoes were confirmed in Michigan, causing relatively minor damage.[76][77] Late that evening, another EF1 tornado struck Knoxville, Pennsylvania, damaging at least 25 homes and over 250 trees.[78] On the evening of May 30, more tornadoes occurred over Nebraska, the Dakotas, and Minnesota. The tornadoes in the Fargo, North Dakota area were most impactful, with two high-end EF2 tornadoes striking near the city. Five other tornadoes, one rated EF2 and four rated EF1, struck nearby areas.[79][80] Numerous homes and other structures were damaged, but no injuries were reported.[81][82] A final EF1 tornado moved through Bay County, Michigan, on May 31 to end the month, with several homes sustaining minor damage.[83]

June edit

There were 177 tornadoes reported in the United States in June, of which 156 were confirmed.

In addition to the events listed below, two tornadoes caused moderate damage in the city of New Plymouth in New Zealand.[84]

June 1 (Northeast) edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 1 4 0 1 0 0
 
The Springfield tornado.

In the Northeast, several severe thunderstorms began developing along the tail end of a cold front during the late morning hours of June 1. By the early afternoon, a tornado watch was issued for parts of Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island. A rare tornado outbreak (for the region) began late that afternoon with several tornadoes confirmed in Maine and Massachusetts.

That afternoon, an EF3 tornado occurred in downtown Springfield, Massachusetts and continued east for 39 miles devastating the towns of Westfield, Wilbraham, Monson, Brimfield, Sturbridge, Southbridge and Charlton. Major damage in the area was reported; there were some roof collapses in downtown businesses and damage to the brick structures. Numerous injuries were reported there. Significant damage was also reported in West Springfield, Monson and several other communities where houses were reported to have been destroyed or flattened. Three deaths have been directly attributed to the Springfield tornado, the first killer tornado in Massachusetts since 1995.[85]

June 18–22 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 43 21 9 5 0 0
 
The Polk County tornado.

On June 19, the Storm Prediction Center issued a moderate risk of severe weather for the Central Plains. By the evening hours, several tornadoes had touched down over rural areas. 48 tornadoes have been reported to the Storm Prediction Center.[86]

During the afternoon of June 20, a PDS tornado watch was issued for much of central Nebraska and north-central Kansas due to the threat of significant tornadoes. Additionally, very large hail, at least 4 in (10 cm) in diameter, is expected within the watch area. Around 1:00 p.m. local time, storm chasers reported a large EF3 tornado on the ground north of Hill City, Kansas and again later that afternoon near Elm Creek, Nebraska. Numerous other tornadoes were reported across the region including near Ravenna and in York County, some reported to have been very large and intense, but mostly over open country. Tornado warnings are stretching from North Dakota to Kansas. Additionally, a major derecho event may develop farther south – a PDS Severe Thunderstorm Watch was issued for parts of Oklahoma and North Texas as well. On the 21st, tornado watches were issued for several areas, including central Minnesota and Wisconsin, southern Illinois and parts of Missouri, and lower Michigan. Tornadoes were reported in Anoka County, Minnesota, and Green Lake and Fond du Lac Counties in Wisconsin.[87] Additionally, local law enforcement reported a tornado in Allegan County in Michigan, with photos taken also showing what looked like a tornado, but no damage was seen in the area, and the National Weather Service determined it to have been low hanging clouds.[88] Meanwhile, a major derecho event impacted the Chicago Metropolitan Area. The worst damage was in Wheeling, Illinois.

A series of tornadoes tracked across the Louisville, Kentucky area late on June 22. A total of five tornadoes were confirmed in the area, including two that were rated EF2. One of the tornadoes directly hit Churchill Downs severely damaging several buildings on the site. Other significant damage was reported in several industrial parks in the metropolitan area with buildings heavily damaged. Tornadoes were also confirmed in Mississippi, Tennessee, Michigan, and Indiana.[89]

July edit

There were 92 tornadoes reported in the United States in July, of which 102 were confirmed. The higher final total is due to a large number of late reports.

In Alberta, Canada, at least four tornadoes touched down on various days, causing relatively minor damage.[90][91] 12 buildings over a one block area were affected. Some damaged roofs and flooded streets.

July 11 edit

A powerful derecho formed in Iowa and moved through Illinois, Michigan, and Ohio generating winds as high as 130 miles per hour (210 km/h) in Vinton, Iowa. It also spawned a weak EF0 tornado that damaged crops in Moorland, Iowa.[92]

July 16–17 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 13 5 0 1 0 0

Numerous tornadoes touched down over the northern Plains on both July 16 and 17 at the edge of a very hot, humid air mass. At least 16 tornadoes were reported, mostly in North Dakota. Most remained over open country but a few caused significant damage, including a house which was destroyed from a strong EF3 tornado in LaMoure County.[93]

August edit

There were 52 tornadoes reported in the United States in August, of which 59 were confirmed. The higher final total is due to late reports.

August 1 (Russia) edit

On August 1, an F2 tornado struck the city of Blagoveshchensk, Russia.[10] Remaining on the ground for 13 minutes, the storm damaged over 100 homes, 150 cars and uprooted 150 trees. One person was killed and twenty-eight were injured, four of whom were hospitalized. Losses from the tornado were estimated at €1.2 to 2 million ($1.8 to 2.9 million).[94] In the wake of the storm, officials declared a state of emergency to help speed up recovery efforts.[95]

August 10 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 1 0 1 0 0 0

Early on August 10, a strong tornado (a rarity in mid-summer in Oklahoma) hit near Locust Grove, Oklahoma embedded in a larger thunderstorm complex. The tornado destroyed a mobile home killing one person (the first killer tornado since June 1 in the US) and injuring two others. The tornado was rated as an EF2.[96][97]

August 19 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 2 1 0 0 0 0

An isolated tornado, rated EF1 with winds up to 105 mph (169 km/h) struck Wausaukee, Wisconsin, killing one person.

August 21 (United States and Canada) edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 0 1 1 1 0 0

A tornadic waterspout touched down late in the afternoon over Lake Huron, coming ashore at Goderich, Ontario. The tornado struck the downtown area nearly directly with severe damage. Many buildings were damaged or destroyed in the community by the tornado, the strongest in Ontario since 1996. There are early reports of 2 other tornadoes in the region.[98] At least 37 people were injured and a 61-year-old worker at a salt mine was killed as winds of 300 km/h (190 mph; 160 kn) raged. The storm was rated an F3 tornado by Environment Canada.[99] An EF2 tornado was also confirmed in western New York, near Conquest[100] and an EF1 tornado occurred in Grafton County, New Hampshire.

August 26–28 (Hurricane Irene) edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 4 3 1 0 0 0

The outer bands and core of Hurricane Irene produced numerous tornadoes as it made landfall in North Carolina and tracked northward. They were reported across several states along the immediate east coast. One tornado near Columbia, North Carolina (rated EF2) resulted in severe destruction to several houses and injuries including manufactured homes destroyed while an EF1 tornado in Lewes, Delaware also resulted in significant tornado-related damage.[101][102]

September edit

There were 65 tornadoes reported in the United States in September, of which 51 were confirmed.

September 3–7 (Tropical Storm Lee) edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 21 9 0 0 0 0

Slow-moving Tropical Storm Lee resulted in at least 55 tornado reports along the immediate northern Gulf Coast beginning on September 3 and into September 4, inching inland on the afternoon of September 4. Several areas of damage, some significant, was reported from central Louisiana to the western Florida Panhandle.[103][104]

A moderate risk of severe weather, a rare occurrence when associated with a tropical cyclone, was issued for September 5 in Alabama and Georgia, with numerous tornadoes possible. The most concentrated tornadic activity that day took place in northern and central Georgia, particularly around Atlanta. In addition, an EF1 tornado associated with an unrelated cold front touched down in Amsterdam, New York.

October edit

There were 24 tornadoes reported in the United States in October, of which 23 were confirmed.

October 2 (South Africa) edit

Two tornadoes occurred in South Africa on October 2, one in the Free State and one in the East Rand, Gauteng. Several homes were destroyed, and two people were killed in the township of Duduza.[105]

October 13 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 4 1 0 0 0 0

Several tornadoes touched down in central Virginia on October 13 as a result of low-topped supercells that developed in the area. The most severe damage was in New Kent County where an elementary school was heavily damaged. Several houses were also damaged. Houses were also damaged in Louisa County. One other tornado took place near Dumfries, Virginia along Interstate 95 at the peak of rush hour, but no severe damage was reported. In total, five tornadoes were confirmed.[106]

October 18 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 2 0 1 0 0 0

At least three tornadoes touched down in Florida late on October 18. Dozens of homes were damaged in Broward County by a tornado with winds of 120 mph, which left a damage path more than a mile long and half a mile wide. A second tornado with wind speeds of 85 mph struck Indiantown, and a third tornado with winds up to 65 mph caused major damage to a home in Indiro.

November edit

There were 60 tornadoes reported in the United States in November, of which 46 were confirmed.

November 7–8 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 12 7 1 0 1 0
 
A tornado near Manitou, Oklahoma on November 7.

A series of tornadoes touched down across the south-central United States, particularly Texas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana, on November 7 and 8 as a storm system tracked across the region. A total of 21 tornadoes were confirmed across the region, causing sporadic damage. One of the tornadoes was rated as an EF4, destroying the Oklahoma State University agronomy research station near Tipton, Oklahoma, the first F4 or EF4 tornado in Oklahoma in the month of November since records began in 1950. Most of the tornadoes, however, remained in very rural areas, mainly impacting trees and forested areas. No injuries reported with the tornadoes.[107][108]

November 14–16 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 8 9 7 0 0 0
 
A mobile home that was destroyed by an EF2 tornado in Hamilton, Georgia.

Several tornadoes occurred across the United States beginning the afternoon of November 14 and continuing through November 16. On November 14, two EF2 tornadoes were confirmed in southwestern New York, a rare occurrence there so late in the year,[109] while another tornado struck Paoli, Indiana, causing considerable damage in downtown.[110] After a brief tornado on November 15 in San Jacinto County, Texas, numerous tornadoes struck the Southern United States throughout the day on November 16, resulting in severe damage and injuries.[111]

A total of 20 tornadoes occurred on November 16 in a small but deadly outbreak. Some tornadoes caused considerable damage, especially in Mississippi, Alabama, and the Carolinas. A series of supercell thunderstorms developed and produced multiple tornadoes. Five tornadoes were rated EF2, one of which destroyed multiple homes near Laurel, Mississippi, and injured 15 people. An EF1 tornado west of Tangipahoa, Louisiana heavily damaged a home and pushed it several feet off of its foundation.[112] During the afternoon, one long-track tornado began southwest of Auburn, Alabama and travelled 61 miles (98 km) across the Georgia state line into the Hamilton area. This tornado caused EF1-level damage in Auburn and EF2 damage in Hamilton. Four people were injured by the tornado: two in Auburn and two in Hamilton.[113][114] A deadly tornado later touched down near Rock Hill, South Carolina, causing severe damage and three fatalities.[115][116] Another destructive EF2 tornado touched down east of Linwood, North Carolina, and impacted residential and commercial areas south of Thomasville. Numerous homes and businesses were destroyed, two people were killed, and several people were trapped in destroyed structures and required rescue. Over 75 structures were damaged or destroyed by the tornado.[117][118] A sixth fatality, due to straight-line winds, occurred in Forsyth County, Georgia.[119]

November 29 (United Kingdom) edit

FU F0 F1 F2 F3 F4 F5
0 1 3 0 0 0 0

An F0 tornado tore through a Caravan Park near Llanfwrog, causing minor damage.[120] Another tornado hit Manchester causing damage to trees and buildings. One woman was taken to the hospital with minor injuries. The Lancashire Police reported having received a report of a "small tornado" around 14:30 GMT.[121] A tornado rated F1 (T3) was confirmed in Rossington, South Yorkshire during the evening of November 28, damaging roofs on houses.[122]

December edit

There were 15 tornadoes reported in the United States in December, all of which were confirmed.

December 20–22 edit

EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5
0 7 6 1 1 0 0

After a lull in activity, fifteen tornadoes were confirmed across Louisiana, Alabama, and Georgia from December 20 to December 22, making up all of the United States tornado activity during the month. The strongest of the tornadoes, an EF3 in Georgia on December 22, resulted in severe damage in parts of Floyd and Gordon counties, including houses destroyed.[123] Four people were injured in Gordon County, and three others were injured by an EF2 tornado near Rome.[124] Most of the tornadoes in Alabama were rated EF0, although one EF1 tornado tracked 25 miles (40 km) across three counties, causing widespread tree damage.[125][126]

December 25 (Australia) edit

The outer north-western suburbs of Melbourne, Australia were hit by three reported tornadoes on Christmas Day after a series of severe thunderstorms moved through the city. The first tornado was reported in Fiskville, approximately 15 km west of Bacchus Marsh.[127] The second was reported in the city of Melton.[127] Another tornado was reported in Taylors Lakes.[128] The storms and tornadoes were accompanied with extremely heavy rainfall, flash flooding, high winds and tennis ball-sized hail.

See also edit

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External links edit

  • State of the Climate: Tornadoes: 2011 (NCDC)
  • United States Tornadoes of 2011 (SPC)
  • The Online Tornado FAQ (by Roger Edwards, SPC) – spc.noaa.gov
  • U.S. Severe Weather Map – Weather Underground
  • WSI Lightning Networks – USPLN, NAPLN and GLN – Lightning map
  • – April 2011 Tornado Story Archive

tornadoes, 2011, this, page, documents, tornadoes, tornado, outbreaks, 2011, extremely, destructive, tornadoes, form, most, frequently, united, states, bangladesh, brazil, eastern, india, they, occur, almost, anywhere, under, right, conditions, tornadoes, also. This page documents the tornadoes and tornado outbreaks of 2011 Extremely destructive tornadoes form most frequently in the United States Bangladesh Brazil and Eastern India but they can occur almost anywhere under the right conditions Tornadoes also appear regularly in neighboring southern Canada during the Northern Hemisphere s summer season and somewhat regularly in Europe Asia and Australia Tornadoes of 2011 map data Graph of the 2011 United States tornado countTimespanJanuary 1 December 22 2011Maximum rated tornadoEF5 tornadoPhiladelphia Mississippion April 27Hackleburg Phil Campbell Alabamaon April 27Smithville Mississippion April 27Rainsville Alabamaon April 27Joplin Missourion May 22El Reno Piedmont Oklahomaon May 24Tornadoes in U S 1 706 1 Damage U S 26 54 billion Record costliest 2 Fatalities U S 553 3 gt 5 370 injuries Fatalities worldwide 5712009 2010 2011 2012 2013Tornadoes of 2011 in the United States There were 1 706 tornadoes confirmed in the United States in 2011 It was the second most active year on record with only 2004 having more confirmed tornadoes 2011 was an exceptionally destructive and deadly year for tornadoes worldwide at least 571 people perished due to tornadoes 12 in Bangladesh two in South Africa one each in New Zealand the Philippines Russia and Canada and 553 in the United States compared to 564 deaths in the prior ten years combined Due mostly to several extremely large tornado outbreaks in the middle and end of April and in late May the year finished well above average in almost every category with six EF5 tornadoes and nearly enough total tornado reports to eclipse the mark of 1 817 tornadoes recorded in 2004 the current record year for total number of tornadoes The 553 confirmed fatalities marks the second most tornadic deaths in a single year in U S history behind only 1925 in terms of fatalities attributed to tornadic activity Most of the damage and over two thirds of the year s total fatalities were caused by a late April Super Outbreak and an EF5 tornado that struck Joplin Missouri in late May 4 Contents 1 Synopsis 2 Events 2 1 United States yearly total 3 January 3 1 January 1 3 2 January 24 25 Europe 4 February 4 1 February 24 4 2 February 27 28 5 March 5 1 March 5 6 5 2 March 8 9 5 3 March 21 23 5 4 March 29 31 6 April 6 1 April 4 5 6 2 April 4 Bangladesh 6 3 April 8 11 6 4 April 14 16 6 5 April 19 24 6 6 April 25 28 7 May 7 1 May 3 New Zealand 7 2 May 9 14 7 3 May 21 26 7 4 May 29 31 8 June 8 1 June 1 Northeast 8 2 June 18 22 9 July 9 1 July 11 9 2 July 16 17 10 August 10 1 August 1 Russia 10 2 August 10 10 3 August 19 10 4 August 21 United States and Canada 10 5 August 26 28 Hurricane Irene 11 September 11 1 September 3 7 Tropical Storm Lee 12 October 12 1 October 2 South Africa 12 2 October 13 12 3 October 18 13 November 13 1 November 7 8 13 2 November 14 16 13 3 November 29 United Kingdom 14 December 14 1 December 20 22 14 2 December 25 Australia 15 See also 16 References 17 External linksSynopsis editFatal United States tornadoes in 2011 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp class notpageimage Approximate touchdown location of killer tornadoes in 2011Further informationFebruary 28 Tennessee 1 death March 5 Louisiana 1 death April 5 Georgia 1 death April 14 Oklahoma 2 deaths April 15 Arkansas 2 deaths April 15 Alabama 1 death April 15 Mississippi Alabama 4 deaths April 15 Alabama 3 deaths April 16 North Carolina 6 deaths April 16 North Carolina 2 deaths April 16 North Carolina 3 deaths April 16 North Carolina 1 death April 16 Virginia 2 deaths April 16 North Carolina 12 deaths April 25 Arkansas 1 death April 25 Arkansas 4 deaths April 27 Mississippi 1 death April 27 Alabama 1 death April 27 Alabama 1 death April 27 Tennessee 1 death April 27 Mississippi 3 deaths April 27 Alabama 6 deaths April 27 Mississippi 4 deaths April 27 Alabama Tennessee 72 deaths April 27 Alabama 13 deaths April 27 Mississippi 23 deaths April 27 Alabama Georgia 14 deaths April 27 Alabama 64 deaths April 27 Alabama Tennessee 1 death April 27 Tennessee 4 deaths April 27 Alabama 7 deaths April 27 Mississippi Alabama 7 deaths April 27 Alabama Georgia 25 deaths April 27 Alabama Georgia 22 deaths April 27 Georgia Tennessee 20 deaths April 27 Virginia 1 death April 27 Tennessee 4 deaths April 27 Alabama 7 deaths April 27 Georgia 1 death April 27 Tennessee 6 deaths April 27 Tennessee 2 deaths April 27 Georgia 2 deaths April 27 Georgia 2 deaths April 27 Tennessee 2 deaths April 28 Virginia 3 deaths May 21 Kansas 1 death May 22 Minnesota 1 death May 22 Missouri 158 deaths May 24 Oklahoma 1 death May 24 Oklahoma 9 deaths May 24 Oklahoma 1 death May 24 Kansas 2 deaths May 25 Arkansas 4 deaths May 25 Arkansas 1 death June 1 Massachusetts 3 deaths August 10 Oklahoma 1 death August 19 Wisconsin 1 death November 16 North Carolina 2 deaths November 16 South Carolina 3 deaths Total fatalities 553An ongoing outbreak at the end of 2010 continued into the first three hours of 2011 During that period seven tornadoes touched down in Mississippi However during the remainder of the month tornadic activity was suppressed by a cold air mass with nine additional tornadoes all weak taking place 5 This inactivity continued through much of February before a pattern shift Two consecutive outbreaks took place on February 25 and 27 28 producing a combined 55 tornadoes Overall 63 tornadoes were confirmed in the month making it the fourth most active February on record 6 Activity in March was split between the start and end of the month and with a total of 75 tornadoes touching down it ran slightly above average for the month In early April a prolific severe weather event produced 46 tornadoes and more than 1 200 reports of wind damage setting the tone for the month 7 A nearly continuous series of major tornado outbreaks followed thereafter in the remainder of April including two extreme multi day tornado outbreaks that were among the largest in U S history one of them also one of the deadliest and the costliest and two other large tornado outbreaks resulting in an incredibly active month from start to finish it was the most active month for tornadoes on record and by an extremely large margin the most active April with 773 tornadoes touching down 8 In an abrupt reversal the activity did not continue into May normally the most active month for tornadoes however and the first half was remarkably quiet becoming one of the least active Mays on record by the middle of the month The lack of activity continued for three weeks until a tornado outbreak sequence began on May 21 and a deadly tornado hit Joplin Missouri the following day in the event The outbreak sequence continued for the next several days with 241 confirmed touchdowns bringing the month of May near average The first day of June brought a rare outbreak into New England where several tornadoes touched down some of which were destructive However another reversal took place afterward and much of June was fairly quiet with the exception of an active period in the third week of the month which included a moderate tornado outbreak July was also relatively quiet for the most part with below normal activity occurring mostly within the northern Plains August was more quiet with below normal activity and only 59 confirmed tornadoes September and October were also below average November was somewhat more active primarily due to two moderate outbreaks in the first half of the month December saw a return to inactivity for most of the month but there was a small outbreak of 13 tornadoes on December 22 making it the final tornado outbreak of the year Events editSee also List of United States tornadoes from January to March 2011 List of United States tornadoes in April 2011 List of United States tornadoes in May 2011 List of United States tornadoes in June 2011 List of United States tornadoes from July to August 2011 List of United States tornadoes from September to October 2011 List of United States tornadoes from November to December 2011 and List of European tornadoes in 2011 United States yearly total edit Confirmed tornadoes by Enhanced Fujita rating EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5 Total0 798 626 198 61 17 6 1706January editSee also List of United States tornadoes from January to March 2011 There were 29 tornadoes reported in the US in January of which 16 were confirmed 5 January 1 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 0 4 1 2 0 0Main article 2010 New Year s Eve tornado outbreak A late season deadly tornado outbreak continued through the early hours of January 1 with seven tornadoes touching down in Mississippi over three hours The strongest of these rated EF3 with winds of 145 mph 233 km h reached 0 75 mi 1 21 km in width along its 23 45 mi 37 74 km track and caused significant damage along Mississippi Highway 19 Several structures were damaged or destroyed and two people were injured Near Mississippi Highway 35 thousands of trees were uprooted by the tornado Another EF3 touched down near Macon damaging or destroying several structures and one person was injured Overall damage in the state from tornadoes amounted to 10 4 million 9 January 24 25 Europe edit FU F0 F1 F2 F3 F4 F50 0 2 1 0 0 0In late January three tornadoes touched down in eastern Europe two in Turkey and one in Greece In Kemalpasa Turkey an F1 tornado caused the wall of an industrial building to collapse Several other structures sustained roof damage The strongest of these tornadoes was an F2 that touched down in northern Rhodes destroying small structures and killing several heads of cattle Hail up to 5 cm 2 0 in in diameter fell in some places damaging farmland and greenhouses Accumulations of hail also reached 15 cm 5 9 in in Mersin Province Turkey 10 February editSee also List of United States tornadoes from January to March 2011 There were 61 tornadoes reported in the US in February of which 68 were confirmed The higher final total is due to a large number of late reports 5 In addition to the events listed below there was an F2 tornado in Greece on February 23 that destroyed a restaurant 10 and a brief weak tornado associated with Cyclone Carlos which struck the town of Karratha in Western Australia 11 February 24 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 3 6 5 0 0 0Several tornadoes touched down across parts of the Southern United States The most significant tornado was in the southeastern part of Nashville Tennessee where significant damage was reported near Hickory Hollow Mall and near Percy Priest Lake in the evening with widespread wind damage all across Middle Tennessee and a tornado emergency was declared shortly thereafter for areas to the northeast in Wilson County where another tornado touched down with injuries Both tornadoes were rated EF2 Other tornadoes touched down with varying degrees of damage in the Missouri Bootheel West Tennessee Mississippi southwestern Kentucky and parts of Arkansas including three others rated EF2 The overall damage from this system amounted to 1 500 000 12 February 27 28 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 11 21 7 1 0 0 nbsp A home destroyed by an EF2 tornado in Dubois County IndianaAnother severe weather event developed on February 27 and continued into February 28 across the Midwest and South While a large portion of the damage was due to damaging straight line winds at least 35 tornadoes were reported across several states The most destructive tornado was in Franklin County Tennessee on the afternoon of February 28 where one person was killed by an EF2 tornado It was the first killer tornado of 2011 Another strong tornado rated EF3 resulted in houses destroyed near Eminence Kentucky 13 14 Concentrated tornado activity also occurred in parts of Missouri and Illinois with 22 tornadoes in the region some as strong as EF2 related to a series of squall lines with many embedded tornadoes None of those tornadoes resulted in any fatalities Overall damages from this system amounted to 12 800 000 15 March editSee also List of United States tornadoes from January to March 2011 There were 95 tornadoes reported in the US in March of which 75 were confirmed 5 March 5 6 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 7 2 1 0 0 0One confirmed EF0 tornado hit the town of Crowley Louisiana Another reportedly hit Greene County Mississippi on March 5 It formed in a squall line which hit portions of Mississippi Alabama and Louisiana A deadly EF2 tornado struck Rayne Louisiana early that afternoon killing a mother while she protected her daughter 16 At least 12 others were injured Initial assessments indicate that 62 homes were destroyed and 50 more damaged Two EF0 tornadoes were also confirmed in eastern North Carolina March 8 9 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 5 10 5 0 0 0Several tornadoes touched down once again on March 8 into March 9 from North Texas eastward to the Florida Panhandle with Louisiana hardest hit The most destructive tornadoes rated EF2 touched down just north of New Orleans in St Tammany Parish 17 March 21 23 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 7 4 3 1 0 0A tornado developed in the afternoon of March 21 near Maxwell California and it crossed Interstate 5 but however caused no known damage as it was on the ground for only a few minutes The same system produced more severe weather ahead of a dry line across eastern Nebraska where tornadoes were reported northeast of Omaha Later a cluster of supercells began producing tornadoes in south central Iowa where a tornado was reported in Greenfield Iowa and at least 2 tornadoes were reported near Winterset Iowa Several funnel clouds were reported in Des Moines where there was a possible touchdown These funnels were associated with the storm that produced the first tornado to hit Greenfield and Winterset On March 23 more tornadoes and severe weather developed with the most significant tornadoes touching down in East Tennessee where significant damage was reported Near Greenback in Blount County an EF3 tornado was confirmed with severe damage in the area Another notable tornado touched down in southwestern Pennsylvania most notably in Hempfield Township Pennsylvania It was rated EF2 March 29 31 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 6 7 0 0 0 0 nbsp Damage from one of the tornadoes near Tampa On March 29 a warm front over the Gulf of Mexico associated with an upper level low over Texas moved northward into the Gulf Coast States bringing scattered severe weather 18 In Louisiana three tornadoes touched down including an EF1 which caused a three story building to collapse 19 In Mississippi one person was killed after lightning caused a house fire A strong microburst also took place in Copiah County producing winds up to 110 mph 180 km h 20 Activity shifted into central Florida on March 30 as a frontal boundary stalled out across the state During the two day period ten tornadoes touched down and a series of squall lines produced widespread wind damage on March 31 21 Significant damage took place in several communities and damage exceeded 5 million 22 Seven people were injured when one of the tornadoes hit a local festival 23 April editSee also List of United States tornadoes in April 2011 There were 875 tornadoes reported in the United States in April of which 773 were confirmed 5 That set a new all time monthly record significantly exceeding the previous record of 542 in May 2003 and nearly tripling the old record for April 267 in 1974 24 In Alabama the monthly for April and yearly record was broken with 89 and 98 tornadoes respectively 25 April 4 5 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 9 31 6 0 0 0Main article Derecho and tornado outbreak of April 4 5 2011 Several storms started to develop in the evening on April 3 Storms in Kansas Missouri Iowa and Illinois brought severe thunderstorms to the areas A tornado watch was issued for Iowa and Illinois as the storms rolled through and later a severe thunderstorm watch for northeastern Illinois and southeastern Wisconsin However there were no reported tornadoes 26 Continuing eastward the system entered an environment favoring tornadic development Two tornadoes were reported in Kentucky during the early afternoon both rated EF2 and resulting in injuries 7 Near Hopkinsville a tornado confirmed by local emergency services caused significant damage to a manufacturing plant 27 Numerous buildings were reported to be destroyed trapping residents within debris 28 In addition to the tornadoes there was widespread wind damage over 1 400 severe weather reports were received by the Storm Prediction Center with the vast majority being damaging winds as an extremely large squall line serial derecho tracked across the southern United States with wind gusts as high as 90 mph 145 km h reported across 20 states 7 killing at least 9 people one of the deaths was as a result of an EF2 tornado in Dodge County Georgia Numerous power outages also took place due to the extensive wind damage Nearly 100 000 and 147 000 residences lost power in Tennessee and Georgia respectively 29 30 April 4 Bangladesh edit During the afternoon of April 4 a powerful tornado struck seven districts in northern Bangladesh At least 12 people were killed and more than 150 injured as the tornado destroyed hundreds of homes and uprooted large swaths of vegetation 31 April 8 11 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 12 26 8 4 1 0See also Tornado outbreak of April 9 11 2011 nbsp Damage from the EF3 Mapleton tornadoA large storm system with an associated frontal boundary moved northward and eastward across the central United States beginning on April 8 While initial severe weather was limited a lone supercell broke out ahead of a mesoscale convective system in Pulaski County Virginia on the eastern end of the warm front that evening Two tornadoes were confirmed one of which was an EF2 that caused severe damage in Pulaski Virginia Numerous houses were damaged and eight people were injured 32 During the afternoon of April 9 supercells developed along the warm front and tracked through parts of Kentucky Tennessee Virginia and North Carolina generating softball sized hail and eight more tornadoes 33 During the evening of April 9 several severe thunderstorms developed across Nebraska South Dakota and Iowa A single supercell became tornadic over extreme western Iowa producing a family of ten tornadoes over the course of five hours 33 The first was 0 75 mi 1 21 km wide and struck Mapleton Iowa 34 destroying about 100 homes Due to a 20 minute warning time no fatalities took place and only 14 to 16 people were injured Officials blocked off the town and Governor Terry Branstad issued a disaster proclamation for the town 35 Additional tornadic activity developed on April 10 across Wisconsin with several more tornadoes reported there April 14 16 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 52 81 32 13 0 0Main article Tornado outbreak of April 14 16 2011 nbsp The Tushka Oklahoma tornado During the afternoon of April 14 a significant tornado outbreak started setting up A PDS Particularly Dangerous Situation tornado watch was issued for much of eastern Oklahoma 36 Supercells explosively developed over central Oklahoma Storm chasers in the region reported several funnel clouds and two touchdowns neither of which resulted in damage Several tornadoes were confirmed through storm chaser video and local emergency management services A large intense multiple vortex tornado caused severe damage in the towns of Atoka and Tushka where many houses were destroyed or flattened Numerous injuries were reported in the latter of these areas 37 Two people were killed and 25 more injured in Tushka 38 39 In Arkansas 2 people were killed when an EF1 downed a tree which landed on a house 40 41 During the late night hours into the morning of April 15 tornadic activity lessened However by the late morning hours supercell thunderstorms developed again over parts of Mississippi and tornadoes began to touch down again A tornado emergency was declared for the northern Jackson metropolitan area as a result at shortly after 11 00 am CDT 1600 UTC A destructive tornado moved across the area with severe damage and multiple injuries according to WLBT coverage That afternoon Mississippi State University spotters confirmed a large tornado in east central Mississippi and west central Alabama and another tornado emergency was issued ABC 33 40 coverage reported that the tornado was 3 4 mile 1 2 km in width Over 90 tornado sightings were reported that day and at least eight people were killed in Mississippi and Alabama On April 16 another PDS tornado watch along with a high risk alert from the SPC were issued for central and eastern North Carolina At least 24 died and 135 were seriously injured in what became North Carolina s worst tornado outbreak in 25 years tornadoes also struck South Carolina Virginia Maryland and Pennsylvania 42 Twelve of the North Carolina deaths took place in Bertie County tornado emergencies were issued for Raleigh Snow Hill and Wilson at the height of the outbreak In North Carolina twelve supercells produced at least 25 tornadoes with at least 32 counties affected A total of 21 businesses and 440 homes were destroyed 63 of those homes in Raleigh about 92 businesses and 6 189 homes suffered significant damage 184 of those homes in Raleigh 42 43 44 April 19 24 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 61 56 15 1 1 0Main articles Tornado outbreak sequence of April 19 24 2011 and 2011 St Louis tornado nbsp A house that was completely destroyed at EF4 intensity in the suburbs of St Louis Yet another severe weather event developed across the Midwest and southern Great Plains on April 19 as another dynamic low pressure system tracked across the area Thunderstorms began in the late afternoon and early evening with large hail and several tornadoes Significant damage was reported near Bowling Green Missouri and Girard Illinois as a result of tornadoes the latter of which was rated EF3 Another large tornado was reported near Octavia Oklahoma before the supercells merged into a very large squall line Overnight the squall line tracked eastward with widespread wind damage and many embedded tornadoes across several states a few as strong as EF2 but most were brief and weak In the early hours of April 20 2011 a tornado tore through a neighborhood in Oregon Ohio leaving some significant damage and no injuries Also three tornadoes struck New Albany Indiana and Jeffersonville Indiana Both are cities just north of Louisville Kentucky 45 On April 22 the outbreak continued with several tornadoes causing damage in the Midwest the most notable being a violent EF4 that struck St Louis Missouri causing extensive damage A few more tornadoes were reported on April 23 24 however most did not cause any severe damage though one EF2 tornado caused structural damage in the town of Bardwell Kentucky Severe weather once again developed across parts of the Midwest on April 22 The hardest hit area was parts of the St Louis metropolitan area A destructive tornado tracked across the region with severe damage in several communities including houses destroyed in communities such as Bridgeton Ferguson Florissant Hazelwood Maryland Heights and New Melle Lambert St Louis International Airport was hard hit with severe damage to numerous facilities there and injuries reported Windows were blown out of the terminals there and airplanes were flipped in the field Concourse C was the hardest hit taking nearly a year to reopen it reopened on April 2 2012 46 47 The tornado was given a rating of EF4 based on finding of flattened houses in Bridgeton Following assessments by the local National Weather Service it was determined that a single tornado tracked for 22 miles 35 km through parts of Missouri and Illinois reaching a maximum width of 0 4 miles 0 64 km Elsewhere there were several reported tornadoes including an EF2 which tracked through Henderson Webster and Union County 48 April 25 28 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 134 140 49 22 11 4Main articles 2011 Super Outbreak 2011 Philadelphia Mississippi tornado 2011 Hackleburg Phil Campbell tornado 2011 Smithville Mississippi tornado 2011 Tuscaloosa Birmingham tornado and 2011 Rainsville tornado Between April 25 and 28 a historic tornado outbreak took place across much of the Southern United States as well as parts of the Midwest and Northeast With 360 confirmed tornadoes and 324 tornadic fatalities the outbreak ranks as the largest and one of the worst in United States history More than three dozen tornadoes were confirmed each day of the event with 42 on April 25 55 on April 26 a 24 hour record of 216 on April 27 and 47 on April 28 In terms of violent tornadoes the event ranks third with 15 EF4 5 storms behind the 1974 Super Outbreak and 1965 Palm Sunday outbreak nbsp The cyclone responsible for the historic outbreak on April 27 A large outbreak was possible for April 25 27 as the SPC issued a moderate risk of severe weather for three consecutive days centered over Arkansas through Tennessee By the late afternoon hours of April 25 several tornadoes had been reported across a few states including two which caused significant damage in Oklahoma and Texas At 3 25 pm CST 2025 UTC the SPC issued a PDS tornado watch for much of Arkansas and parts of Missouri Oklahoma Texas and Louisiana 49 Tornadoes were scattered that day until early evening when an intense tornadic cell tracked near the Little Rock metropolitan area and a tornado emergency was declared for Vilonia Arkansas A 0 5 mile 0 80 km wide EF2 tornado then caused extensive damage in Vilonia At least four people are known to have died in the town with many more injured nbsp Road surface stripped by an EF5 tornado near Philadelphia Mississippi On April 27 a large tornado struck Tuscaloosa Alabama killing 44 people 50 The Tuscaloosa mayor called the damage catastrophic The same tornado hit the northern suburbs of Birmingham Alabama shortly thereafter killing 20 more people Television reporters in Birmingham filming the tornado reported that even from miles away the funnel was so wide that they could not zoom their cameras out far enough to get the entire funnel into the frame at once Over 200 tornadoes were reported during the SPC s reporting day of 1200Z April 27 7 00 am CDT to 1200Z April 28 7 00 am CDT 51 324 tornadic deaths were confirmed as a result of the outbreak with as many as 238 in Alabama alone The overall death toll also includes 32 deaths in Tennessee 31 in Mississippi 14 in Georgia 5 in Arkansas and 4 in Virginia according to state officials On April 27 President Barack Obama approved Governor Robert Bentley s request for emergency federal assistance including search and rescue support On April 28 2011 the National Weather Service sent out people to survey the damage however with the large number of tornadoes across Alabama the reports were not finalized for months By April 30 the death toll from the event including death tolls from flooding and other severe weather stood at more than 340 people across six states On a lesser note an F0 tornado the Fujita scale was still used in Canada downed trees and ripped siding off store buildings in Fergus Ontario on April 27 52 May editSee also List of United States tornadoes in May 2011 There were 370 tornadoes reported in the United States in May of which 326 were confirmed In addition to the events listed below two other tornadoes one in the Philippines and Taiwan also touched down 53 The former of these resulted in significant damage and killed one person in Calumpit Bulacan 54 May 3 New Zealand edit nbsp The Albany tornado caused significant damage to roofs of buildings in its path On May 3 a line of showers and thunderstorms tracked into the Northland from the Tasman Sea bringing unsettled weather to much of the region The Meteorological Service of New Zealand Limited MetService mentioned the possibility of strong thunderstorms being embedded within the line producing small hail and gusty winds Significant upward motion in the atmosphere developed in the region surrounding Auckland prompting the MetService to issue a high risk of thunderstorms in the area With low level wind shear and helicity the possibility of tornadic activity was present At 2 55 pm NZST a hook echo was apparent on the weather radar indicating strong rotation and a likely tornado 55 Several minutes later around 3 00 pm NZST a tornado struck the Auckland suburb of Albany With winds estimated at 125 mph 201 km h the tornado ranked as a high end EF2 and caused considerable damage along a 3 1 mi 5 0 km long track in the area 56 57 Several cars were tossed up to 20 ft 6 1 m in the air by the storm and pieces of iron roofing were reportedly seen 300 ft 91 m above the ground 58 A total of 50 homes sustained varying degrees of damage along the tornado s track 59 The most severe damage took place at a local shopping mall where large portions of the roof were torn off One person was killed and at least 20 others were injured here 58 Damage estimates from the storm were placed in the tens of millions 59 May 9 14 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 22 7 1 0 0 0 nbsp This transmission tower near Wall South Dakota was bent by an EF2 tornadoOn May 9 a strong upper level ridge over the Mississippi River Valley produced a narrow axis of extreme instability from eastern Nebraska to central South Dakota In light of this the SPC issued a slight risk of severe weather for much of South Dakota and Iowa as well as parts of Minnesota Missouri and Nebraska 60 Enhanced by a mid level jet wind shear in the region increased providing a more favorable environment for strong thunderstorms 61 During the course of the day three tornadoes struck South Dakota The strongest an EF2 in Pennington County crumpled a transmission tower 62 Continuing into May 10 the system slowly moved eastward shifting the center of severe activity in the Upper Plains to Minnesota 63 Thunderstorms in the state mainly produced large hail measured up to 2 5 in 6 4 cm in diameter However one EF1 tornado touched down causing significant damage to a garage 64 On May 11 an upper level low moved out of the Four Corners Region into the Central Plains prompting a moderate risk of severe weather from the SPC The main threat from these storms was expected to be large hail with a considerable region being given a 45 percent chance of hail 65 Later that day the moderate risk was discontinued and replaced by a large area under a slight risk According to the SPC the issuance of a moderate risk was due to an improper handling of ongoing storms 66 Tornadic activity during the event was scattered and consisted of short lived events In all 16 tornadoes touched down across five states Nebraska Iowa Missouri Oklahoma and Texas In Iowa twin EF1 tornadoes struck the city of Lenox damaging several homes 67 Continuing eastward the low became diffuse and produced scattered severe weather on May 12 13 and 14 with tornadoes confirmed in Nebraska Illinois Louisiana and Ohio 68 May 21 26 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 109 86 31 8 3 2Main articles Tornado outbreak sequence of May 21 26 2011 2011 Joplin tornado and 2011 El Reno Piedmont tornado On May 21 a small system of thunderstorms began to develop in Brown County Kansas At the same time another system formed to the southeast of Emporia Kansas The Brown County system developed produced a couple tornadoes over Shawnee County Kansas including one near Topeka that caused minor damage Meanwhile the Emporia system moved to the northeast where an EF3 tornado heavily damaged the town of Reading Kansas One person was killed several others were injured and at least 20 houses were destroyed 69 Several other tornadoes touched down in the region that evening all of which were in the EF0 EF1 range 70 nbsp St John s Regional Medical Center in Joplin after the tornado nbsp A debarked tree just north El Reno Oklahoma with various debris including a car piled at its base and severe ground scouring in the foreground A moderate risk of severe weather was issued for much of the Midwest south to Oklahoma for May 22 The first tornadic supercell that day developed in the mid afternoon hours over the western Twin Cities with a swath of damage especially in and around Minneapolis Minnesota 71 An intense tornado also tracked towards Harmony Minnesota that afternoon and a tornado emergency was issued Late that afternoon at about 5 15 p m CDT 2215 UTC a very large and intense multiple vortex tornado resulted in catastrophic damage in Joplin Missouri Many houses and businesses were flattened and some even were blown away in Joplin the main hospital was heavily damaged and many people were reported to have been trapped in destroyed houses The Weather Channel video showed entire communities flattened Early reports suggested there were at least 125 fatalities 72 73 but the death toll was later confirmed to be much higher exactly 158 with another 1 000 injured 74 This tornado was given a rating of EF5 Late in the afternoon on May 24 supercells began forming over western Kansas and Oklahoma as the National Weather Service predicted a dangerous tornado outbreak As a line of powerful cells began to take shape trained spotters reported large tornadoes near El Reno Oklahoma and in rural Grady County Oklahoma One of these swept from Binger to Guthrie destroying many homes and causing at least nine fatalities This tornado was rated an EF5 the sixth of the year and second of the outbreak sequence Three other EF4 tornadoes developed among the many other tornadoes that day At around 10 00 p m EDT on May 25 an EF3 tornado hit the city of Bedford Indiana U S Route 50 was temporarily closed due to heavy debris Also a tornado had reportedly touched down in Keyser WV and tracked as far as Berkeley Springs Three tornadoes also hit the Sacramento Valley of California north of Sacramento One tornado rated at EF1 struck east of Artois uprooting hundreds of almond trees and causing damage to farm equipment and roofing materials Another tornado rated at EF1 struck south of Durham uprooting thousands of almond trees destroying an out building and damaging a barn A tornado rated at EF2 struck northwest of Oroville causing heavy damage to a ranch and a garage 75 On May 26 strong thunderstorms travelled through the Cumberland Valley in South Central Pennsylvania with reports of EF1 tornadoes near Carlisle Mechanicsburg and Hershey Tornadoes also destroyed the setup for the Harrisburg ArtsFest scheduled to take place the following weekend May 29 31 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 9 9 3 0 0 0Tornado activity continued across the Northern United States near the end of May with a couple rounds of storms working eastward and producing scattered tornadoes On May 29 three EF1 tornadoes were confirmed in Michigan causing relatively minor damage 76 77 Late that evening another EF1 tornado struck Knoxville Pennsylvania damaging at least 25 homes and over 250 trees 78 On the evening of May 30 more tornadoes occurred over Nebraska the Dakotas and Minnesota The tornadoes in the Fargo North Dakota area were most impactful with two high end EF2 tornadoes striking near the city Five other tornadoes one rated EF2 and four rated EF1 struck nearby areas 79 80 Numerous homes and other structures were damaged but no injuries were reported 81 82 A final EF1 tornado moved through Bay County Michigan on May 31 to end the month with several homes sustaining minor damage 83 June editSee also List of United States tornadoes in June 2011 There were 177 tornadoes reported in the United States in June of which 156 were confirmed In addition to the events listed below two tornadoes caused moderate damage in the city of New Plymouth in New Zealand 84 June 1 Northeast edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 1 4 0 1 0 0Main article 2011 New England tornado outbreak nbsp The Springfield tornado In the Northeast several severe thunderstorms began developing along the tail end of a cold front during the late morning hours of June 1 By the early afternoon a tornado watch was issued for parts of Connecticut Massachusetts Maine New Hampshire New Jersey New York Pennsylvania and Rhode Island A rare tornado outbreak for the region began late that afternoon with several tornadoes confirmed in Maine and Massachusetts That afternoon an EF3 tornado occurred in downtown Springfield Massachusetts and continued east for 39 miles devastating the towns of Westfield Wilbraham Monson Brimfield Sturbridge Southbridge and Charlton Major damage in the area was reported there were some roof collapses in downtown businesses and damage to the brick structures Numerous injuries were reported there Significant damage was also reported in West Springfield Monson and several other communities where houses were reported to have been destroyed or flattened Three deaths have been directly attributed to the Springfield tornado the first killer tornado in Massachusetts since 1995 85 June 18 22 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 43 21 9 5 0 0Main article Tornado outbreak of June 18 22 2011 nbsp The Polk County tornado On June 19 the Storm Prediction Center issued a moderate risk of severe weather for the Central Plains By the evening hours several tornadoes had touched down over rural areas 48 tornadoes have been reported to the Storm Prediction Center 86 During the afternoon of June 20 a PDS tornado watch was issued for much of central Nebraska and north central Kansas due to the threat of significant tornadoes Additionally very large hail at least 4 in 10 cm in diameter is expected within the watch area Around 1 00 p m local time storm chasers reported a large EF3 tornado on the ground north of Hill City Kansas and again later that afternoon near Elm Creek Nebraska Numerous other tornadoes were reported across the region including near Ravenna and in York County some reported to have been very large and intense but mostly over open country Tornado warnings are stretching from North Dakota to Kansas Additionally a major derecho event may develop farther south a PDS Severe Thunderstorm Watch was issued for parts of Oklahoma and North Texas as well On the 21st tornado watches were issued for several areas including central Minnesota and Wisconsin southern Illinois and parts of Missouri and lower Michigan Tornadoes were reported in Anoka County Minnesota and Green Lake and Fond du Lac Counties in Wisconsin 87 Additionally local law enforcement reported a tornado in Allegan County in Michigan with photos taken also showing what looked like a tornado but no damage was seen in the area and the National Weather Service determined it to have been low hanging clouds 88 Meanwhile a major derecho event impacted the Chicago Metropolitan Area The worst damage was in Wheeling Illinois A series of tornadoes tracked across the Louisville Kentucky area late on June 22 A total of five tornadoes were confirmed in the area including two that were rated EF2 One of the tornadoes directly hit Churchill Downs severely damaging several buildings on the site Other significant damage was reported in several industrial parks in the metropolitan area with buildings heavily damaged Tornadoes were also confirmed in Mississippi Tennessee Michigan and Indiana 89 July editSee also List of United States tornadoes from July to August 2011 There were 92 tornadoes reported in the United States in July of which 102 were confirmed The higher final total is due to a large number of late reports In Alberta Canada at least four tornadoes touched down on various days causing relatively minor damage 90 91 12 buildings over a one block area were affected Some damaged roofs and flooded streets July 11 edit Main article July 2011 Midwest Derecho A powerful derecho formed in Iowa and moved through Illinois Michigan and Ohio generating winds as high as 130 miles per hour 210 km h in Vinton Iowa It also spawned a weak EF0 tornado that damaged crops in Moorland Iowa 92 July 16 17 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 13 5 0 1 0 0Numerous tornadoes touched down over the northern Plains on both July 16 and 17 at the edge of a very hot humid air mass At least 16 tornadoes were reported mostly in North Dakota Most remained over open country but a few caused significant damage including a house which was destroyed from a strong EF3 tornado in LaMoure County 93 August editSee also List of United States tornadoes from July to August 2011 There were 52 tornadoes reported in the United States in August of which 59 were confirmed The higher final total is due to late reports August 1 Russia edit On August 1 an F2 tornado struck the city of Blagoveshchensk Russia 10 Remaining on the ground for 13 minutes the storm damaged over 100 homes 150 cars and uprooted 150 trees One person was killed and twenty eight were injured four of whom were hospitalized Losses from the tornado were estimated at 1 2 to 2 million 1 8 to 2 9 million 94 In the wake of the storm officials declared a state of emergency to help speed up recovery efforts 95 August 10 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 1 0 1 0 0 0Early on August 10 a strong tornado a rarity in mid summer in Oklahoma hit near Locust Grove Oklahoma embedded in a larger thunderstorm complex The tornado destroyed a mobile home killing one person the first killer tornado since June 1 in the US and injuring two others The tornado was rated as an EF2 96 97 August 19 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 2 1 0 0 0 0An isolated tornado rated EF1 with winds up to 105 mph 169 km h struck Wausaukee Wisconsin killing one person August 21 United States and Canada edit See also 2011 Goderich tornado EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 0 1 1 1 0 0A tornadic waterspout touched down late in the afternoon over Lake Huron coming ashore at Goderich Ontario The tornado struck the downtown area nearly directly with severe damage Many buildings were damaged or destroyed in the community by the tornado the strongest in Ontario since 1996 There are early reports of 2 other tornadoes in the region 98 At least 37 people were injured and a 61 year old worker at a salt mine was killed as winds of 300 km h 190 mph 160 kn raged The storm was rated an F3 tornado by Environment Canada 99 An EF2 tornado was also confirmed in western New York near Conquest 100 and an EF1 tornado occurred in Grafton County New Hampshire August 26 28 Hurricane Irene edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 4 3 1 0 0 0See also Hurricane Irene The outer bands and core of Hurricane Irene produced numerous tornadoes as it made landfall in North Carolina and tracked northward They were reported across several states along the immediate east coast One tornado near Columbia North Carolina rated EF2 resulted in severe destruction to several houses and injuries including manufactured homes destroyed while an EF1 tornado in Lewes Delaware also resulted in significant tornado related damage 101 102 September editSee also List of United States tornadoes from September to October 2011 There were 65 tornadoes reported in the United States in September of which 51 were confirmed September 3 7 Tropical Storm Lee edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 21 9 0 0 0 0See also Tropical Storm Lee 2011 Slow moving Tropical Storm Lee resulted in at least 55 tornado reports along the immediate northern Gulf Coast beginning on September 3 and into September 4 inching inland on the afternoon of September 4 Several areas of damage some significant was reported from central Louisiana to the western Florida Panhandle 103 104 A moderate risk of severe weather a rare occurrence when associated with a tropical cyclone was issued for September 5 in Alabama and Georgia with numerous tornadoes possible The most concentrated tornadic activity that day took place in northern and central Georgia particularly around Atlanta In addition an EF1 tornado associated with an unrelated cold front touched down in Amsterdam New York October editSee also List of United States tornadoes from September to October 2011 There were 24 tornadoes reported in the United States in October of which 23 were confirmed October 2 South Africa edit Two tornadoes occurred in South Africa on October 2 one in the Free State and one in the East Rand Gauteng Several homes were destroyed and two people were killed in the township of Duduza 105 October 13 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 4 1 0 0 0 0Several tornadoes touched down in central Virginia on October 13 as a result of low topped supercells that developed in the area The most severe damage was in New Kent County where an elementary school was heavily damaged Several houses were also damaged Houses were also damaged in Louisa County One other tornado took place near Dumfries Virginia along Interstate 95 at the peak of rush hour but no severe damage was reported In total five tornadoes were confirmed 106 October 18 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 2 0 1 0 0 0At least three tornadoes touched down in Florida late on October 18 Dozens of homes were damaged in Broward County by a tornado with winds of 120 mph which left a damage path more than a mile long and half a mile wide A second tornado with wind speeds of 85 mph struck Indiantown and a third tornado with winds up to 65 mph caused major damage to a home in Indiro November editSee also List of United States tornadoes from November to December 2011 There were 60 tornadoes reported in the United States in November of which 46 were confirmed November 7 8 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 12 7 1 0 1 0 nbsp A tornado near Manitou Oklahoma on November 7 A series of tornadoes touched down across the south central United States particularly Texas Oklahoma and Louisiana on November 7 and 8 as a storm system tracked across the region A total of 21 tornadoes were confirmed across the region causing sporadic damage One of the tornadoes was rated as an EF4 destroying the Oklahoma State University agronomy research station near Tipton Oklahoma the first F4 or EF4 tornado in Oklahoma in the month of November since records began in 1950 Most of the tornadoes however remained in very rural areas mainly impacting trees and forested areas No injuries reported with the tornadoes 107 108 November 14 16 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 8 9 7 0 0 0 nbsp A mobile home that was destroyed by an EF2 tornado in Hamilton Georgia Several tornadoes occurred across the United States beginning the afternoon of November 14 and continuing through November 16 On November 14 two EF2 tornadoes were confirmed in southwestern New York a rare occurrence there so late in the year 109 while another tornado struck Paoli Indiana causing considerable damage in downtown 110 After a brief tornado on November 15 in San Jacinto County Texas numerous tornadoes struck the Southern United States throughout the day on November 16 resulting in severe damage and injuries 111 A total of 20 tornadoes occurred on November 16 in a small but deadly outbreak Some tornadoes caused considerable damage especially in Mississippi Alabama and the Carolinas A series of supercell thunderstorms developed and produced multiple tornadoes Five tornadoes were rated EF2 one of which destroyed multiple homes near Laurel Mississippi and injured 15 people An EF1 tornado west of Tangipahoa Louisiana heavily damaged a home and pushed it several feet off of its foundation 112 During the afternoon one long track tornado began southwest of Auburn Alabama and travelled 61 miles 98 km across the Georgia state line into the Hamilton area This tornado caused EF1 level damage in Auburn and EF2 damage in Hamilton Four people were injured by the tornado two in Auburn and two in Hamilton 113 114 A deadly tornado later touched down near Rock Hill South Carolina causing severe damage and three fatalities 115 116 Another destructive EF2 tornado touched down east of Linwood North Carolina and impacted residential and commercial areas south of Thomasville Numerous homes and businesses were destroyed two people were killed and several people were trapped in destroyed structures and required rescue Over 75 structures were damaged or destroyed by the tornado 117 118 A sixth fatality due to straight line winds occurred in Forsyth County Georgia 119 November 29 United Kingdom edit FU F0 F1 F2 F3 F4 F50 1 3 0 0 0 0An F0 tornado tore through a Caravan Park near Llanfwrog causing minor damage 120 Another tornado hit Manchester causing damage to trees and buildings One woman was taken to the hospital with minor injuries The Lancashire Police reported having received a report of a small tornado around 14 30 GMT 121 A tornado rated F1 T3 was confirmed in Rossington South Yorkshire during the evening of November 28 damaging roofs on houses 122 December editSee also List of United States tornadoes from November to December 2011 There were 15 tornadoes reported in the United States in December all of which were confirmed December 20 22 edit EFU EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF50 7 6 1 1 0 0After a lull in activity fifteen tornadoes were confirmed across Louisiana Alabama and Georgia from December 20 to December 22 making up all of the United States tornado activity during the month The strongest of the tornadoes an EF3 in Georgia on December 22 resulted in severe damage in parts of Floyd and Gordon counties including houses destroyed 123 Four people were injured in Gordon County and three others were injured by an EF2 tornado near Rome 124 Most of the tornadoes in Alabama were rated EF0 although one EF1 tornado tracked 25 miles 40 km across three counties causing widespread tree damage 125 126 December 25 Australia edit The outer north western suburbs of Melbourne Australia were hit by three reported tornadoes on Christmas Day after a series of severe thunderstorms moved through the city The first tornado was reported in Fiskville approximately 15 km west of Bacchus Marsh 127 The second was reported in the city of Melton 127 Another tornado was reported in Taylors Lakes 128 The storms and tornadoes were accompanied with extremely heavy rainfall flash flooding high winds and tennis ball sized hail See also editTornado Tornadoes by year Tornado records Tornado climatology Tornado myths List of tornado outbreaks List of F5 and EF5 tornadoes List of F4 and EF4 tornadoes List of F4 and EF4 tornadoes 2010 2019 List of North American tornadoes and tornado outbreaks List of 21st century Canadian tornadoes and tornado outbreaks List of European tornadoes and tornado outbreaks List of tornadoes and tornado outbreaks in Asia List of Southern Hemisphere tornadoes and tornado outbreaks List of tornadoes striking downtown areas List of tornadoes with confirmed satellite tornadoes Tornado intensity Fujita scale Enhanced Fujita scale International Fujita scale TORRO scaleReferences edit U S Annual Tornado Maps 1952 2011 Storm Prediction Center National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved May 10 2015 United States Tornadoes of 2012 PDF Storm Prediction Center Retrieved January 13 2013 Annual U S Killer Tornado Statistics Storm Prediction Center National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved January 18 2016 US Annual Tornado Death Tolls 1875 present Norman noaa gov March 1 2009 Archived from the original on September 28 2011 Retrieved October 5 2011 a b c d e Monthly and Annual U S Tornado Summaries Storm Prediction Center National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration April 6 2011 Retrieved April 7 2011 Jake Crouch March 8 2011 State of the Climate Tornadoes February 2011 National Climatic Data Center Retrieved April 7 2011 a b c Storm Reports for April 4 2011 Storm Prediction Center April 4 2011 Retrieved April 4 2011 U S April Tornadoes National Climatic Data Center May 7 2010 Retrieved April 18 2011 Storm Data and 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am KOAM TV 7 Archived from the original on January 27 2013 Retrieved May 23 2011 Deadly tornado kills 124 leaves twilight zone in its wake CNN May 24 2011 Storm Event Survey National Weather Service Springfield Missouri June 19 2012 Damage Assessed from Tornadoes Sacramento Bee June 2 2011 Archived from the original on December 3 2011 Retrieved June 2 2011 Michigan Event Report EF1 Tornado National Centers for Environmental Information 2011 Retrieved January 22 2023 Michigan Event Report EF1 Tornado National Centers for Environmental Information 2011 Retrieved January 22 2023 Pennsylvania Event Report EF1 Tornado National Centers for Environmental Information 2011 Retrieved January 22 2023 North Dakota Event Report EF2 Tornado National Centers for Environmental Information 2011 Retrieved January 22 2023 North Dakota Event Report EF2 Tornado National Centers for Environmental Information 2011 Retrieved January 22 2023 Minnesota Event Report EF1 Tornado National Centers for Environmental 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20110717 s Storm Report 1200 UTC 1159 UTC Retrieved July 17 2011 Russian city reels from 3 million tornado damage official Herald Sun Australia Agence France Press August 1 2011 Retrieved August 2 2011 Russia s Far East region declares emergency in the wake of deadly tornado Washington Post Associated Press August 1 2011 Retrieved August 2 2011 dead link NOAA August 9 2011 20110809 s Storm Report 1200 UTC 1159 UTC Retrieved August 11 2011 NOAA August 10 2011 Public Information Statement Mayes County Tornado Survey Retrieved August 11 2011 The Weather Network Alexandra Pope August 21 2011 Possible tornadoes touch down in Goderich Retrieved August 21 2011 Global News August 22 2011 Goderich residents clean up after deadly F3 Archived from the original on December 4 2011 Retrieved August 22 2011 NWS Buffalo August 22 2011 Public Information Statement Retrieved August 25 2011 NOAA August 26 2011 20110826 s Storm Report 1200 UTC 1159 UTC Retrieved August 27 2011 NOAA August 27 2011 20110827 s Storm Report 1200 UTC 1159 UTC Retrieved August 27 2011 NOAA September 3 2011 20110903 s Storm Report 1200 UTC 1159 UTC Retrieved September 4 2011 NOAA September 4 2011 20110904 s Storm Report 1200 UTC 1159 UTC Retrieved September 4 2011 SOUTH AFRICA Tornadoes kill two leave thousands homeless Latimesblogs latimes com Retrieved October 5 2011 NOAA October 13 2011 20111013 s Storm Report 1200 UTC 1159 UTC Retrieved October 13 2011 NOAA November 7 2011 20111107 s Storm Report 1200 UTC 1159 UTC Retrieved November 9 2011 NOAA November 8 2011 20111108 s Storm Report 1200 UTC 1159 UTC Retrieved November 9 2011 NOAA November 15 2011 Chautauqua County Tornado November 14 2011 Retrieved November 16 2011 Indiana Event Report EF1 Tornado National Centers for Environmental Information 2011 Retrieved January 29 2023 NOAA November 15 2011 20111115 s Storm Report 1200 UTC 1159 UTC Retrieved November 16 2011 Louisiana Event Report EF1 Tornado National Centers for Environmental Information 2011 Retrieved January 29 2023 Alabama Event Report EF1 Tornado National Centers for Environmental Information 2011 Retrieved January 29 2023 Georgia Event Report EF2 Tornado National Centers for Environmental Information 2011 Retrieved January 29 2023 South Carolina Event Report EF1 Tornado National Centers for Environmental Information 2011 Retrieved January 29 2023 South Carolina Event Report EF2 Tornado National Centers for Environmental Information 2011 Retrieved January 29 2023 North Carolina Event Report EF2 Tornado National Centers for Environmental Information 2011 Retrieved January 29 2023 North Carolina Event Report EF1 Tornado National Centers for Environmental Information 2011 Retrieved January 29 2023 NOAA November 16 2011 20111116 s Storm Report 1200 UTC 1159 UTC Retrieved November 16 2011 Caravans turn over in high winds at Llanfwrog Anglesey BBC November 30 2011 Retrieved December 1 2011 Woman hurt as tornado hits Greater Manchester BBC November 29 2011 Retrieved November 29 2011 Tornado Hits Rossington Thorne and District Gazette Retrieved December 8 2011 Georgia Event Report EF3 Tornado National Centers for Environmental Information 2011 Retrieved January 29 2023 Georgia Event Report EF2 Tornado National Centers for Environmental Information 2011 Retrieved January 29 2023 Alabama Event Report EF1 Tornado National Centers for Environmental Information 2011 Retrieved January 29 2023 Alabama Event Report EF0 Tornado National Centers for Environmental Information 2011 Retrieved January 29 2023 a b Melbourne mops up after wild Christmas storms ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation December 27 2011 Retrieved January 3 2012 Deery Shannon Deery December 27 2011 Tornado hit suburb like a bomb Herald Sun Retrieved January 3 2012 External links editState of the Climate Tornadoes 2011 NCDC United States Tornadoes of 2011 SPC The Online Tornado FAQ by Roger Edwards SPC spc noaa gov U S Severe Weather Map Weather Underground WSI Lightning Networks USPLN NAPLN and GLN Lightning map The Tornado Monologues April 2011 Tornado Story Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tornadoes of 2011 amp oldid 1211097746, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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