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It maybe a few hours too soon, but are we witnessing a tornado outbreak sequence? It seems that way to me that we are, and a very significant one as well. We have a Preliminary Rating of "at least high-end EF3 intensity" for one tornado on December 23, and one with an intensity of a least EF4 on December 26. And as these are Preliminary Ratings, it appears there is a chance they both might be upgraded to "EF5"!!! Either one could be the first December tornado of F5 or EF5 intensity in many decades (at minimum we had first of F4 or EF4 intensity in the past 15 years). Please, discuss. Thank you.-- Halls4521 ( talk) 18:19, 27 December 2015 (UTC)
Looks like looking at the NWS Memphis Twitter feeds, it looks to be more than one tornado involved along that long track. First one was 63 miles long (the one east of Clarksdale) and EF3, while at some point it broke and reform as an EF4 near Ashland (assuming it's the same that hit Holly Springs) . Also the Twitter feed during the event showed actually at least two supercells producing large tornadoes (another was near Oxford). 173.177.230.240 ( talk) 17:00, 28 December 2015 (UTC)
Are we still expecting to get some data filled in this column or should we remove it? -- 91.47.64.254 ( talk) 14:24, 19 February 2016 (UTC)
![]() | This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||
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It maybe a few hours too soon, but are we witnessing a tornado outbreak sequence? It seems that way to me that we are, and a very significant one as well. We have a Preliminary Rating of "at least high-end EF3 intensity" for one tornado on December 23, and one with an intensity of a least EF4 on December 26. And as these are Preliminary Ratings, it appears there is a chance they both might be upgraded to "EF5"!!! Either one could be the first December tornado of F5 or EF5 intensity in many decades (at minimum we had first of F4 or EF4 intensity in the past 15 years). Please, discuss. Thank you.-- Halls4521 ( talk) 18:19, 27 December 2015 (UTC)
Looks like looking at the NWS Memphis Twitter feeds, it looks to be more than one tornado involved along that long track. First one was 63 miles long (the one east of Clarksdale) and EF3, while at some point it broke and reform as an EF4 near Ashland (assuming it's the same that hit Holly Springs) . Also the Twitter feed during the event showed actually at least two supercells producing large tornadoes (another was near Oxford). 173.177.230.240 ( talk) 17:00, 28 December 2015 (UTC)
Are we still expecting to get some data filled in this column or should we remove it? -- 91.47.64.254 ( talk) 14:24, 19 February 2016 (UTC)