The violent tornado that forever scarred Moore, Oklahoma, took less than ten minutes to carve from one side of town to the other. That devastating twister left behind EF-5 damage in its wake, the most ...
What is the difference between a hurricane and a tornado? Learn how these powerful storms form, how they are named, and the ...
Meteorologist Taylor Stephenson explains the severe thunderstorm risk tiers issued by the Storm Prediction Center.
Winds of up to 120 miles per hour wreaked destruction across the county as a huge weather system battered swathes of the U.S.
EF-4 or EF-5 tornadoes, the most violent on the damage scale ... be capable of destructive hurricane-force wind gusts greater than 74 mph, equivalent to a Category 1 hurricane, and large hail. The ...
2 or Cat. 3 hurricanes ... at a Monday afternoon press conference that it's believed the tornado was on the ground for at least 5 minutes, traveled at least 1.8 miles, and had peak winds of ...
EF-4 or EF-5 tornadoes, the most violent on the damage ... hurricane-force wind gusts greater than 74 mph, equivalent to a Category 1 hurricane, and large hail. The storms will continue into ...
It follows the events of the category EF5 tornado that hit the Missouri town of Joplin in 2011 and provides first-hand ...
On Tuesday, March 25, the National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center upgraded the likelihood that the thunderstorm approaching western Washington will become severe.