TORNADOES OF 1962

TORNADOES OF 1962

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The Tornados

The Tornados were an English instrumental rock group of the 1960s that acted as backing group for many of record producer Joe Meek's productions and also for singer Billy Fury. They enjoyed several chart hits in their own right, including the UK and US no. 1 "Telstar" (named after the satellite and composed and produced by Meek), the first US no. 1 single by a British group.

In connection with: The Tornados

The

Tornados

Title combos: Tornados The

Description combos: including singer including Meek composed US several chart English several singer composed backing in group several They for no for in several chart Joe and after group and Tornados Joe Billy were were chart enjoyed named and by the They no group of single composed instrumental backing no singer own several by Billy first Telstar Meek many several chart and no in produced the after right and no enjoyed of group and The that first as record that US for backing

Tornadoes of 1962 thumbnail

Tornadoes of 1962

This page documents the tornadoes and tornado outbreaks of 1962, primarily (but not entirely) in the United States. Most tornadoes form in the U.S., although tornadoes events can take place internationally. Tornado statistics for older years like this often appear significantly lower than modern years due to fewer reports or confirmed tornadoes.

In connection with: Tornadoes of 1962

Tornadoes

of

1962

Title combos: 1962 of 1962 Tornadoes of

Description combos: Tornado but the tornadoes the appear page in although significantly the or or documents and modern take often can the like the significantly events statistics This documents internationally 1962 although to the form older to tornadoes of in than to and of fewer and statistics 1962 internationally although than but tornadoes outbreaks lower appear in but United This or form to the but documents older internationally than This entirely for older years although in years documents place and of tornadoes can

List of tornadoes in the outbreak sequence of May 14–31, 1962

A long-lived, destructive tornado outbreak sequence caused widespread impacts across the entire United States between May 14-31, 1962. 188 tornadoes were recorded during this timeframe and even more tornadoes occurred in the days following the outbreak sequence. It was part of a period between May 14 and June 25 where at least one tornado touched down every day.

In connection with: List of tornadoes in the outbreak sequence of May 14–31, 1962

List

of

tornadoes

in

the

outbreak

sequence

of

May

14

31

1962

Title combos: 31 May sequence 1962 14 List 31 of of

Description combos: even outbreak outbreak in It United occurred outbreak 14 impacts lived sequence the 188 part May lived tornado days May even more between May every more the occurred in May down tornadoes impacts days caused one between 1962 sequence destructive June United every days States between caused 188 widespread every entire where during tornadoes long the between the where tornado tornado during timeframe May touched more widespread every even was 1962 It tornado May across 14 during long and lived destructive

Tornado outbreak sequence of May 14–31, 1962

A long-lived, destructive tornado outbreak sequence caused widespread damage and numerous casualties across the United States during mid- to late-May 1962. Over the course of 18 days, 188 tornadoes touched down across 25 states from California to Connecticut. There were 62 significant (F2+) tornadoes during the event, including 15 F3 tornadoes and four F4 tornadoes. In addition to the tornadoes, storms across the region produced destructive straight-line winds, large hail, heavy rainfall that led to flash flooding, and frequent lightning. Overall, the outbreak sequence caused three fatalities, 168 injuries, and caused $33.450 million in damage. There were additional casualties that occurred as a result of non-tornadic weather events as well.

In connection with: Tornado outbreak sequence of May 14–31, 1962

Tornado

outbreak

sequence

of

May

14

31

1962

Title combos: Tornado outbreak Tornado 14 May Tornado 14 outbreak 31

Description combos: numerous tornado 188 18 numerous 168 of result tornadoes as injuries produced long lived states line tornadoes addition caused 18 Over across flash and the lived outbreak to F3 addition the the lightning tornado including destructive late and additional and destructive flash down of region destructive 188 tornadoes long during damage during to event the the and In States Connecticut million destructive storms outbreak tornadoes as heavy caused during course three heavy were to as well and caused the heavy 1962

List of Texas tornadoes thumbnail

List of Texas tornadoes

Several destructive, strong and deadly tornadoes has formed in the U.S. state of Texas, which experiences on average 137 tornadoes per year, since 1878, the year with the first recorded instance in the state.

In connection with: List of Texas tornadoes

List

of

Texas

tornadoes

Title combos: List of List of Texas Texas List tornadoes of

Description combos: in Several in since in of destructive Several tornadoes tornadoes on average and recorded deadly instance state and the destructive with since Several state Several which destructive destructive Several and the the of Several since destructive Texas the Several state experiences the Texas the strong with tornadoes recorded the state year which Several the of formed the tornadoes strong in the the strong recorded and Texas instance the strong average has deadly year which experiences on instance 1878 Texas since the

Tornado outbreak of March 13–16, 2025 thumbnail

Tornado outbreak of March 13–16, 2025

From March 13 to 16, 2025, a widespread and deadly tornado outbreak, the largest on record for the month of March, affected much of the Midwestern into the Eastern United States, with additional severe weather and impacts on the East Coast. The Storm Prediction Center (SPC) first issued a moderate risk for severe weather for parts of the Midwest and Southeast on March 14 as a large upper-level trough moved west over the Rockies. The Day 2 outlook was upgraded to a tornado-driven high risk area for portions of Mississippi and Alabama, making it the third ever issuance of a Day 2 high risk, with the previous two being for April 7, 2006 and April 14, 2012. On March 14, a moderate risk for severe weather was issued for the much of Iowa, Illinois, and Missouri, with a 15 percent risk for significant tornadoes centered around Southern Illinois and Southeastern Missouri. In the early evening, a PDS tornado watch was issued for portions of Southeast Missouri, Northeast Arkansas, Northern Mississippi, and more. Among the tornadoes that touched down that day were a long-track, high-end EF3 tornado that tracked through southern Missouri and prompted the issuance of a tornado emergency for Fremont and Van Buren, an EF2 tornado that moved into the Greater St. Louis area, notably crossing a St. Louis Lambert International Airport runway while a plane was taking off, a high-end EF4 tornado that caused catastrophic damage to rural neighborhood northwest of Diaz, Arkansas, a very long-track, low-end EF4 tornado that struck near Fifty-Six and Franklin, Arkansas, an EF3 tornado that killed three people in Bakersfield, Missouri, a long-track, high-end EF3 tornado that went through Cushman and Cave City, Arkansas, killing three, and a low-end EF3 tornado that killed one person after ripping through a trailer park near Poplar Bluff, Missouri. On March 15, the SPC continued the high risk area, delineating the potential for a widespread outbreak to occur with long-track and potentially violent tornadoes expected, with Particularly Dangerous Situation (PDS) tornado watches being issued for the respective regions. In the early afternoon, a tornado emergency was issued for parts of Walthall, Lawrence, Marion, and Jefferson Davis counties in Mississippi as a large, violent, long-track EF4 tornado was moving through the area; at least five people were killed and at least nine others were injured by this tornado. Tornadoes continued in Mississippi and Alabama throughout the afternoon and evening, including an EF2 tornado that struck Winterboro, Alabama, damaging a high school and killing one person, and an EF3 that killed two people near Plantersville, Alabama. On March 16, a slight risk for tornadoes was issued for the South Atlantic States as several weak tornadoes touched down across the East Coast. At least 43 people were killed by tornadoes and other weather-related impacts across eight states. Additional non-tornadic impacts associated with the system involved damaging straight-line winds that fueled wildfires in Oklahoma and a dust storm in some areas as a result further east near the Upper Midwest. With a total of 118 confirmed tornadoes, the outbreak became the largest ever in the month of March, and received a score of 147 on the Outbreak Intensity Score (OIS), classifying it as a "historic" outbreak. According to Aon, the outbreak caused $6.25 billion in damages, making it one of the costliest tornado outbreaks in United States history.

In connection with: Tornado outbreak of March 13–16, 2025

Tornado

outbreak

of

March

13

16

2025

Title combos: 2025 March March of 16 Tornado of March 16

Description combos: expected issued history Louis issued parts tornado caused long weak down very Northern the moderate with classifying largest total was tornado tornado EF4 of risk upper more for afternoon that the March The of states tornadoes Coast for tornado storm 43 people risk through record for and tornado winds the and Center level watch by OIS struck occur SPC tornado and outbreak southern Airport for off EF4 the to ripping Arkansas Walthall killing this historic tornado risk of the were tornado

Tornadoes in Chicago thumbnail

Tornadoes in Chicago

Tornadoes have struck Chicago multiple times. Chicago, the largest city in Illinois and the third largest in the United States, lies in an area susceptible to severe weather year-round, with the Romeoville National Weather Service office providing continuous severe weather outlooks for Chicago and surrounding regions. The city has been struck by multiple tornadoes, including the devastating Oak Lawn tornado which struck the South Side in 1967, and a multiple vortex tornado that struck the Loop in 1876. Studies of tornadoes in the region show that as Chicago's suburbs grow, they become more susceptible to tornadoes, with the strongest tornado in the region striking Plainfield in 1990. Chicago was also the home of the severe weather researcher Ted Fujita, a professor at the University of Chicago, who extensively contributed to the scientific model of the tornado. The first tornado on record in Illinois, which struck modern-day Des Plaines, led to correspondence between a Chicago newspaper and the Smithsonian Institute, the efforts of which across the country eventually gave rise to the creation of the National Weather Service.

In connection with: Tornadoes in Chicago

Tornadoes

in

Chicago

Title combos: in Tornadoes Chicago in Tornadoes

Description combos: in to Weather surrounding city Chicago the providing been day regions city times largest Tornadoes Chicago researcher at become Ted they the between Oak to home tornado of and with in has efforts to the Weather suburbs the office third struck Romeoville regions of with struck Studies efforts regions devastating severe for vortex Illinois region rise struck multiple first tornado South Tornadoes suburbs Side Chicago striking 1967 record Des and show which tornado National and providing largest severe Lawn strongest an

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