User:EF5

{{pull quote|They call F5 tornadoes the 'finger of god'; few have stared one in the face and survived.

}}

{{pull quote|History will judge us for the work we did that day.

}}

{{pull quote|Anytime we know that an unjust condition exists and it is illegal and unjust, we will strike at it by any means necessary. And strike also at whatever and whoever gets in the way.

| author = Malcolm X

| source = 1964

}}

{{notice|Never forget those who lost their lives in Alabama during the horrific events of Wednesday, April 27, 2011.|image=Houndstooth_awareness_ribbon.png|align=center|style=background-color:white|textstyle=text-align:center; color:black;}}

File:Texas Floods Devastate Local Communities - 54639313636.jpg]]

EF5 is the highest rating a tornado can achieve on the Enhanced Fujita scale. We haven't had one since 2013, which has attracted significant debate about how effective the scale is.

About me

  • I live in the north-central United States, particularly Ohio. Not the best state for a weather enthusiast.
  • At some point down the road I'm probably going to move to Alabama for education reasons.
  • I enjoy traditional Gnawa music (you should check out "Hamadi" by Abdelkabir Merchane).
  • You can also find me listening to electronic artists like Grimes, Mk.gee, Pastel Ghost, blues artists like Albert Collins, Muddy Waters, Mississippi Fred McDowell, Robert Johnson, and rappers like The Notorious B.I.G., Nas, King Von, and BigXthaPlug.
  • If it wasn't already obvious, my main interests are severe weather and tornadoes.
  • My single favorite tornado coverage moment is Mike Morgan's "[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UMhzB8IiCw0 this is May 3, all over again]" during the 2013 Moore tornado.
  • My favorite overall coverage is [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ElZZNvNdhks&t=10954s James Spann and Jason Simpson's coverage of the April 27, 2011 "Super Outbreak"]. The coverage resulted in loss of life (due to a technical error) but in the end likely saved hundreds of lives.
  • The worst tornado outbreak I have personally been caught in was on March 31–April 1, 2023. At almost exactly midnight we had ran to a Subaru SUV in a basement (in Cheatham County, TN) as the Midland was blaring. Didn't get much sleep that night. We weren't caught in any tornadoes, luckily, but many people in the state were.

Significant tornadoes/Wx events I’ve tracked live on [[NEXRAD]] radar

:* EF5s - 0

:* EF4s - 4 (most recent on May 16, 2025)

:* EF3s - 15+ (most recent on June 20, 2025)

:* EF2s - 12+ (most recent on June 20, 2025)

:* EF1s - Many (most recent in May 2025)

:* EF0s - Many (most recent in May 2025)

My guides & essays

Video games I've beat

[[Weather|Wx]] articles I've started

= Weather by year =

class="wikitable"

|+

!Year

!Deadliest event

!Fatalities

!Article

!Class

2000

|2000 Mozambique flood

|2,716

|Weather of 2000

|{{Icon|start}}

2001

|Typhoon Lingling

|1,820+

|Weather of 2001

|{{Icon|start}}

= Tornadoes by year =

class="wikitable sortable" style="width:100%;"

! scope="col" style="width:3%; text-align:center;" |Highest F#/EF#

! scope="col" style="width:10%; text-align:center;" |Year

!TORs confirmed

! scope="col" style="width:5%; text-align:center;" |Fatalities

!Article

!Class

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5

|1925

|100

|806

|Tornadoes of 1925

|{{Icon|B}}

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |EF4

|2025

|945+

|71

|Tornadoes of 2025

|{{Icon|B}}

= Tornado outbreaks =

class="wikitable sortable" style="width:100%;"

|+

! scope="col" style="width:3%; text-align:center;" |Highest F#/EF#

! scope="col" style="width:10%; text-align:center;" |State of peak activity

! scope="col" style="width:10%; text-align:center;" |Date of peak activity

!TORs confirmed

! scope="col" style="width:5%; text-align:center;" |Fatalities

!Injuries

!Article

!Max risk level

!GAN

!DYK

!Class

!Notes

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat2}}" |EF2

|Kentucky

|April 1, 2024

|86

|5

|25

|Tornado outbreak and derecho of April 1–3, 2024

| bgcolor=Crimson |MDT

|

|

|{{Icon|GA}}

|Collaboration with {{Noping|Hurricane Clyde}}

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat3}}" |EF3

|Texas

|December 28, 2024

|14

|4

|19

|Tornado outbreak of December 26–29, 2024

| bgcolor=Crimson |MDT

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

|Collaboration with {{Noping|Departure–}}. Watched this one unfold live on radar, I still vividly remember the Port Arthur EF3's incredibly velocity "couplet" that was visible for well over two hours.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat2}}" |EF2

|Oklahoma, Texas, Louisiana, North Carolina, Virginia

|March 4-5, 2025

|39

|6

|10

|Early March 2025 North American blizzard

| bgcolor=Orange |ENH

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

|

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |EF4

|Arkansas

|March 14, 2025

|117

|43

|247

|Tornado outbreak of March 13–16, 2025

| bgcolor=hotpink |HIGH

|

|

|{{Icon|B}}

|Started on March 7, largest March outbreak of all time. I watched this one unfold live, particularly the first few tornadoes on the night of March 14 and as all hell broke lose midway through March 15.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat3}}" |EF3+

|Kansas

|May 19, 2025

|123

|0

|10

|Tornado outbreak of May 18–21, 2025

| bgcolor=Crimson |MDT

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

|Collaboration with {{Noping|Departure–}}

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat3}}" |EF3+

|North Dakota

|June 20, 2025

|32

|7

|2

|Tornado outbreak and derecho of June 19–20, 2025

| bgcolor=Crimson |MDT

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

|Collaboration with {{Noping|Departure–}}

= Individual tornadoes =

class="wikitable sortable" style="width:100%;"

|+

! scope="col" style="width:3%; text-align:center;" |F#/EF#

! scope="col" style="width:10%; text-align:center;" |State / Country

! scope="col" style="width:10%; text-align:center;" |Date

! scope="col" style="width:5%; text-align:center;" |Fatalities

!Injuries

!Article

!GAN

!DYK

!Class

!

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5–equiv.

| Missouri, Illinois, Indiana

|March 18, 1925

|695

|2027

|1925 Tri-State tornado

|

|{{Icon|DYK}}

|{{Icon|GA}}

|I was very surprised to find this tornado didn't have an article. It is the deadliest in U.S. history and infamous in the Wx community. It's also the deadliest I've ever written about officially, although the 1973 Bangladesh tornado was likely deadlier. It is widely accepted to have been of F5 strength, tearing trees out of a hillside. It's the longest-tracked of all time, as well.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |F4

|Paraguay

|September 20, 1926

|300+

|500+

|1926 Encarnación tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

|

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5

|Texas

|April 12, 1927

|74

|205

|1927 Rocksprings tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|B}}

|

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5

|Arkansas

|April 10, 1929

|23

|80

|Sneed Tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|B}}

|

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |IF5

|Italy

|July 24, 1930

|23

|110

|1930 Montello tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

|Officially, this is the only "IF5" tornado ever recorded, being upgraded in 2024. It was incredibly rare and long-tracked for the region, leaving a long path of destruction through several towns in Italy. Images of an obliterated brick church are usually what people think of when this tornado is brought up.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |F4

|Poland

|July 20, 1931

|6

|100+

|1931 Lublin tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|Start}}

|

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5

|Texas

|April 3, 1964

|7

|111

|1964 Wichita Falls tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

|This tornado is actually overshadowed by an even-weaker tornado, the 1979 Wichita Falls F4! This was the first tornado to ever be captured on live news cameras, and surprisingly didn't look like an F5, despite being incredibly powerful.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5

|Iowa

|May 15, 1968

|13

|462

|1968 Hansell-Charles City tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

|

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5

|Iowa

|May 15, 1968

|5

|156

|1968 Oelwein tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

|

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|catunk}}" |FU

|Bangladesh

|April 17, 1973

|681+

|1000

|1973 Faridpur District tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|Start}}

|Was likely the deadliest tornado I've ever written about. Official tally is 681 fatalities, but it was likely much higher than that due to Bangladesh's extremely dense population.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5

|Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana

|April 3, 1974

|6

|210

|1974 Cincinnati tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|B}}

|

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5

|Kentucky

|April 3, 1974

|31

|257

|1974 Brandenburg tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|B}}

|

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5

|Alabama

|April 3, 1974

|28

|267

|1974 Tanner tornadoes#First tornado

|{{Icon|GAN}}

|

|{{Icon|B}}

| rowspan="2" |Tanner just can't catch a break! These two incredibly violent tornadoes formed after each other, producing catastrophic damage to the town of Tanner, Alabama and killing a combined total of 55 people. They are one of only two F5 "pairs" ever recorded; the only other happened in 1990.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5

|Alabama, Tennessee

|April 3, 1974

|16

|190

|1974 Tanner tornadoes#Second tornado

|{{Icon|GAN}}

|

|{{Icon|B}}

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5

|Alabama

|April 3, 1974

|28

|272

|1974 Guin tornado

|

|

|{{icon|B}}

|

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat1}}" |F1

|New York

|November 16, 1989

|10

|18

|1989 Coldenham tornado

|

|

|{{icon|C}}

|Easily the deadliest F1 tornado ever recorded due to it hitting and collapsing a brick wall on top of schoolchildren eating lunch. Very tragic story.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5

|Kansas

|April 26, 1991

|17

|225

|1991 Andover tornado

|{{Icon|GAN}}

|{{Icon|DYK}}

|{{Icon|B}}

|This tornado almost hit two nuclear bombs! Luckily it just barely missed.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5

|Texas

|May 27, 1997

|27

|12

|Jarrell tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|GA}}

|One of the more famous tornadoes I've written about; it's known as the "Dead Man Walking" due to a famous photograph that was taken as it was condensing.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |F4

|Ohio

|September 20, 2000

|1

|100

|2000 Xenia tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

|Widely overshadowed by the 1974 Xenia tornado. This is the closest tornado to my city with an article, although where it impacted is still an hour away from me.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |F4

|Kansas

|April 21, 2001

|1

|28

|2001 Hoisington tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|start}}

|

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |EF5

|Kansas

|May 4, 2007

|11

|63

|Greensburg tornado

|

|{{Icon|DYK}}

|{{Icon|GA}}

|Ah, this article is my pride and joy. At 100,000 bytes, it is the largest article (not including lists) that I've ever written, and yet has managed to fail the WP:FAC process four times in a row. It gets an average of ~20,000 pageviews, and is known for literally "wiping" a Kansas town off the map. This tornado was responsible for a tornado emergency.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |EF4

|Oklahoma, Missouri

|May 10, 2008

|21

|350

|2008 Picher–Neosho tornado

|

|{{Icon|DYK}}

|{{Icon|B}}

|Instead of wiping out a Kansas town, this tornado wiped out an Oklahoma town. The difference is that Picher never rebuilt, and sits abandoned today.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat2}}" |EF2

|Wyoming

|June 5, 2009

|0

|0

|2009 Goshen County tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

|

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |EF4

|South Dakota

|May 22, 2010

|0

|0

|2010 Bowdle tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|B}}

|This tornado happened exactly one year before the Joplin tornado, one of the deadliest in U.S. history.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |EF4

|Minnesota

|June 17, 2010

|1

|14

|2010 Conger–Albert Lea tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|B}}

|

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |EF4

|Alabama

|April 27, 2011

|6

|48

|2011 Cullman–Arab tornado

|

|{{Icon|DYK}}

|{{Icon|GA}}

|The Cullman tornado is one of my favorites. It is well-known in the Wx community due to its well-documented multiple-vortex structure as it tore through an Alabama town, although it took five lives as a large "wedge", meaning it was wider than it was tall. A very tragic event indeed. This tornado was responsible for a tornado emergency.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |EF4

|Alabama

|April 27, 2011

|13

|54

|2011 Cordova–Blountsville tornado

|

|{{Icon|DYK}}

|{{Icon|GA}}

|This is my favorite tornado, mainly due to the little amount of coverage surrounding it and some incredible photographs and videos that were taken of it. This tornado is little-known in the Wx community, as it was overshadowed by other tornadoes that took place on April 27, 2011. This tornado was responsible for multiple tornado emergencies.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |EF4

|Georgia, Tennessee

|April 27, 2011

|20+

|335

|2011 Ringgold–Apison tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|GA}}

|One of 16 tornadoes in Georgia history to kill over twenty people, this EF4 (considered by some to be of EF5 intensity) tornado produced extreme damage to homes in Ringgold, Georgia, before devastating rural structures along Cherokee Valley Road, where many of the deaths occurred. This tornado picked up a gun safe and dropped it on top of a sheltering family; it also produced other feats of incredible strength.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |EF4

|Indiana, Kentucky

|March 2, 2012

|12

|0+

|2012 Southern Indiana tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|B}}

|This is one of few tornadoes in history to still have a retained injury toll of "unknown", along with the 2011 Rainsville tornado a year prior. This tornado is believed by some (including me) to have been of EF5 intensity, due to it ripping chunks of pavement out of the ground and slamming them so hard into the ground that the pieces made impact craters.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |EF4

|Texas

|May 15, 2013

|6

|54

|2013 Granbury tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|start}}

|This is probably the shortest-tracked tornado I've written about, although it still managed to wipe a well-bult home off the map and kill six people. This tornado was only captured by one or two people, although the few existing images of it are admittedly terrifying.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |EF4

|Nebraska

|October 4, 2013

|0

|15

|2013 Wayne tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

|A forgotten EF4 that injured 15 people

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |EF4

|Arkansas

|April 27, 2014

|16

|193

|2014 Mayflower–Vilonia tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|GA}}

|This tornado is widely considered to be an EF5 in the Wx community; I was surprised to see it didn't have an article.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |EF4

|Texas

|December 26, 2015

|10

|468

|2015 Garland tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|GA}}

|Widely-forgotten EF4 that tracked over heavily-populated suburbs of the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, causing heavy damage to cars and buildings. It was notably caught on interstate traffic cameras, where several ominous screen stills of the tornado were taken (and have been spread online). Very scary nocturnal tornado. Exactly five years later, Garland was hit by a mass shooting, which I've also written about!

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |EF4

|Oklahoma

|May 9, 2016

|1

|0

|2016 Katie tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

|This tornado killed one person and surprisingly didn't injure anybody, leaving a weird casualty toll of one. That isn't to say it was out in the middle of nowhere, though, several storm chasers got incredible footage of it. My personal favorite is "[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=phEZbzbzyVA&t=459s Violent Katie-Wynnewood, OK Tornado 5/9/2016]" by the Storm Chasing Channel.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat3}}" |EF3–equiv.

|California

|July 26, 2018

|3

|5

|2018 Carr Fire tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

|Yes, a fire tornado does have an article on Wikipedia! It's the deadliest fire tornado ever recorded and the most powerful, producing EF3-equivalent wind speeds. The tornado caught firefighters who were working the Carr Fire off-guard, resulting in three deaths.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat3}}" |EF3

|Mississippi

|February 23, 2019

|1

|19

|2019 Columbus, Mississippi, tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|B}}

|This tornado, widely forgotten by the Wx community, moved through Columbus, Mississippi, causing EF3-rated damage and killing one person. It was a large stovepipe, something seen in [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1L7jV0T_bpU the several videos taken of the tornado].

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat3}}" |EF3

|Tennessee

|March 3, 2020

|5

|220

|2020 Nashville tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|GA}}

|This EF3 tornado tore through downtown Nashville, Tennessee and later Mount Juliet, killing five people and producing an injury count in the hundreds. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8R-fNpFfM4w It was covered live] by several news agencies and was the subject of [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SrtDylAuNyo a relatively famous video] from crane operators who got caught in the tornado high above the ground.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat3}}" |EF3

|Arkansas

|March 28, 2020

|0

|12

|2020 Jonesboro tornado

|

|{{Icon|DYK}}

|{{Icon|GA}}

|Somehow, COVID-19 saved lives! Due to the tornado happening in the initial stages of the widespread COVID-19 pandemic in Arkansas, most people were in quarantine at homes and thus were not caught out in the open by the tornado. It did destroy a mall and injure twelve people, however.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat3}}" |EF3

|Alabama

|January 25, 2021

|1

|30

|2021 Fultondale tornado

|{{Icon|GAN}}

|

|{{Icon|B}}

|The Fultondale tornado was a prime example of what happens when nighttime, winter and warning ignorance meet. Meteorologist James Spann stated that the single fatality from the event was the result of failing to heed warnings. Tornadoes don't usually happen in January, too, so this is an outlier for the region.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat3}}" |EF3

|Kentucky

|December 11, 2021

|17

|63

|2021 Bowling Green tornadoes#Rockford–Bowling Green–Sunnyside–Cedar Spring, Kentucky

|{{Icon|GAN}}

|

|{{Icon|B}}

| rowspan="2" |These two large tornadoes barreled through the town of Bowling Green, Kentucky, producing extensive damage to town. The tornadoes killed a combined total of 17 people, although every fatality and injury was from the EF3 that moved through downtown. This same outbreak produced the infamous Mayfield tornado that killed over 50 people in Kentucky.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat2}}" |EF2

|Kentucky

|December 11, 2021

|0

|0

|2021 Bowling Green tornadoes#Bowling Green, Kentucky

|{{Icon|GAN}}

|

|{{Icon|B}}

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |EF4

|Iowa

|March 5, 2022

|6

|5

|2022 Winterset tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

|This widely-forgotten tornado tore across relatively rural areas southwest of Des Moines, Iowa, ultimately taking six lives on a single road. The tornado was well-documented by storm chasers, being the subject of storm chase videos like "[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fiMKGnfoDN4 WINTERSET, IOWA WEDGE TORNADO]".

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat3}}" |EF3

|Kansas

|April 29, 2022

|0

|3

|2022 Andover tornado

|{{Icon|GAN}}

|{{Icon|DYK}}

|{{Icon|B}}

|This tornado had some incredible footage come out of it, including Reed Timmer's famous "[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lxdFh8nYMgM JAW-DROPPING Tornado Drone Footage Shows Kansas Town Get Ripped Apart]" and the City of Andover's "[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hBB_yOXU4QA Andover Tornado, April 29, 2022, City Hall East Camera]". Overall an incredible event with no loss of life.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat2}}" |EF2

|Alabama

|January 12, 2023

|0

|2

|2023 Selma tornado

|

|{{Icon|DYK}}

|{{Icon|GA}}

|This tornado moved through the "civil rights capital of America" just a few days before Martin Luther King Jr. Day, celebrated in memory of esteemed civil rights activist and pastor Martin Luther King Jr. MLK himself had to been to Selma, which makes the timing and location of this tornado just that much more crazier.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat3}}" |EF3

|Illinois, Indiana

|March 31, 2023

|6

|16

|2023 Robinson–Sullivan tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|GA}}

|This large tornado prompted the issuance of two tornado emergencies for the cities of Robinson, Illinois and Sullivan, Indiana, which is incredibly rare. It was likely violent, producing extreme cycloidal marking in the ground as it moved through rural areas. Despite the extreme strength, only 6 people died.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat3}}" |EF3

|Virginia

|March 31, 2023

|0

|0

|2023 Virginia Beach tornado

|{{Icon|GAN}}

|

|{{Icon|B}}

|While no injuries were produced by this destructive tornado, it is the furthest-east I've ever written about in the United States.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat3}}" |EF3

|Oklahoma

|April 27, 2024

|1

|30

|2024 Sulphur tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|GA}}

|I watched this one happen live! Saw it on radar and early the next morning was horrified by some of the damage photos that came out of Sulphur, Oklahoma.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |EF4

|Oklahoma

|May 6, 2024

|2

|55

|2024 Barnsdall–Bartlesville tornado

|

|

|{{Icon|B}}

|One of the more recent EF4 tornadoes we've seen, is well-known for its incredible hook echo signature on NEXRAD radar. This tornado was responsible for a tornado emergency.

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |EF4

|Kentucky

|May 16, 2025

|19

|108

|2025 Somerset–London tornado

|{{Icon|GAN}}

|

|{{Icon|B}}

|This is the tornado of 2025. It's the deadliest since 2021, and is one of the most horrific tornado events in the 2020s decade, if not all time. As with Sulphur, I watched this one live, my whole reaction as it was happening can be seen in [https://talkweather.com/threads/severe-threat-may-15-16-2025.2394/page-86#post-165541 this thread] from pages 85 to 100, under the username "OH-IOan". Several of us actually started getting nauseous watching it impact the London area, where it was later found that 17 lost their lives. I'd rank this tornado as the second-worst in terms of emotional impact that I've written about after the Greensburg tornado. Somehow, no tornado emergency was issued, which I am still pissed about to this day.

= Tornadoes by state/country =

class="wikitable sortable" style="width:100%;"

! scope="col" style="width:3%; text-align:center;" |F#/EF#

! scope="col" style="width:10%; text-align:center;" |State / Country

! scope="col" style="width:5%; text-align:center;" |Fatalities

!Article

!GAN

!DYK

!Class

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5

| style="text-align: center;" |Texas

| style="text-align: center;" |2,088

|List of Texas tornadoes

|

|

|{{Icon|list}}

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5

| style="text-align: center;" |Ohio

| style="text-align: center;" |531

|List of Ohio tornadoes

|

|

|{{Icon|list}}

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |F4

| style="text-align: center;" |New York

| style="text-align: center;" |64

|List of New York tornadoes

|

|

|{{Icon|list}}

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5

| style="text-align: center;" |Michigan

| style="text-align: center;" |367

|List of Michigan tornadoes

|

|

|{{Icon|list}}

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|storm}}" |EF0

| style="text-align: center;" |Alaska

| style="text-align: center;" |0

|List of Alaska tornadoes

|

|

|{{Icon|list}}

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat3}}" |F3

| style="text-align: center;" |Washington state

| style="text-align: center;" |6

|List of Washington (state) tornadoes

|

|

|{{Icon|list}}

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat1}}" |F1

| style="text-align: center;" |Iceland

| style="text-align: center;" |0

|Tornadoes in Iceland

|

|

|{{Icon|list}}

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat4}}" |F4

| style="text-align: center;" |India

| style="text-align: center;" |1,473

|List of Indian tornadoes

|

|

|{{Icon|list}}

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |F5

| style="text-align: center;" |Illinois

| style="text-align: center;" |2,202

|List of Illinois tornadoes

|

|

|{{Icon|list}}

bgcolor="#{{storm colour|cat5}}" |EF5

| style="text-align: center;" |Oklahoma

| style="text-align: center;" |1,707

|Tornadoes in Oklahoma

|

|{{Icon|DYK}}

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Tornado topics

Floods

class="wikitable"

|+

!Location

!Year

!Deaths

!Injuries

!Article

!GAN

!DYK

!Class

!Notes

California

|1955

|74

|4,325+

|1955 Yuba–Sutter floods

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

|This article was actually a sturdy candidate for being the 7 millionth Wikipedia article! I submitted it as a half-joke thinking it'd get choked out by species stubs, but it made it to the final four. It is visible on the 7M page, under the "Articles created near the same time included" section. Even if it didn't get the distinction, I'm still honored that it was included on the page where many could see it.

Texas

|2025

|118+

|Unk.

| July 2025 Central Texas floods

|

|

|{{Icon|B}}

|I watched these floods as they were unfolding live and the reactions in the days that followed. These floods are by far the deadliest non-tornado Wx event I've ever written about, with at least 118 people losing their lives as of July 8. The floods were featured at ITN and are one of the most-viewed articles I've started, receiving over 300,000 pageviews in the first four days of its existence.

Wildfires

class="wikitable sortable"

!Location

!Year

!Acres

!Deaths

!Injuries

!Article

!GAN

!DYK

!Class

California

|2022

|{{convert|41,596|acres|ha}}

|0

|5

|SRF Lightning Complex fires

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

California

|2023

|{{convert|4,198|acre|km2|0|abbr=on}}

|0

|2

|Deep Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|start}}

California

|2024

|{{convert|3,815|acre|km2|0|abbr=on}}

|0

|0

|Pedro Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

Arizona

|2024

|{{convert|14402|acre|km2|0|abbr=on}}

|0

|0

|Wildcat Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

Nevada

|2024

|{{convert|2,160|acres|ha}}

|0

|0

|Pizona Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|start}}

Oregon

|2024

|{{convert|6,340|acres|ha}}

|0

|0

|Little Yamsay Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|start}}

Colorado

|2024

|{{convert|5,699|acres|ha}}

|0

|0

|Spruce Creek Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|start}}

Washington

|2024

|{{convert|53,343|acres|ha}}

|0

|0

|Swawilla Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|B}}

Arizona

|2024

|{{convert|5,029|acres|ha}}

|0

|0

|Adams Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|start}}

California

|2024

|{{convert|38,664|acres|ha}}

|0

|7

|Lake Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|B}}

California

|2024

|{{convert|14,023|acres|ha}}

|0

|0

|Basin Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|C}}

California

|2024

|{{convert|14,168|acres|ha}}

|0

|2

|Corral Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|start}}

California

|2024

|{{convert|12,967|acres|ha}}

|0

|0+

|Boise Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|start}}

Arizona

|2024

|{{convert|3,059|acres|ha}}

|0

|0

|Waterman Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|start}}

Arizona

|2024

|{{convert|32,568|acres|ha}}

|0

|0

|Freeman Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|start}}

Arizona

|2024

|{{convert|2,162|acres|ha}}

|0

|0

|Watch Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|start}}

Arizona

|2024

|{{convert|5,364|acres|ha}}

|0

|2

|Element Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|start}}

Colorado

|2024

|{{convert|7,202|acres|ha}}

|0

|0

|Bucktail Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|start}}

California

|2024

|{{convert|14,104|acres|ha}}

|0

|3

|Coffee Pot Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|B}}

California

|2025

|{{convert|79,800|acres|ha}}+

|0

|0

|Madre Fire

|

|

|{{Icon|start}}

Good quote from a Wikipedian