Fall Severe Weather
Awareness Day
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
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Showing that severe weather doesn't obey a
calendar, supercell thunderstorms hit northwest Alabama on October
18, 2004. Two tornadoes were confirmed in Colbert and Lauderdale
counties, ranging from F0 to F1 damage. (For more information on
this storm, check out our Storm
Surveys page)
National Weather Service offices throughout Alabama, Mississippi,
and Tennessee are conducting a Severe Weather Awareness Day on Wednesday,
October 17, 2007. The purpose of this day is to call attention
to the secondary peak severe weather season that begins in the late
fall. November historically has been a very active month
for severe weather and tornadoes. Some of the recent fall
severe weather events include:
- 2004 saw the severe weather peak occur in
October, not November. Tornadoes struck Lauderdale and Colbert
Counties on October 18 (check out the storm survey here).
- 2003: A significant line of thunderstorms plowed
through the Tennessee Valley on November 18, resulting in significant
straight-line wind damage. Damaging wind gusts can be just as
destructive as tornadoes, if not more so.
- The infamous Veteran's Day Tornado Outbreak of 2002
brought an F3 tornado to Cullman County, which damaged more than
150 structures (check out the storm survey here).
- Six of the eight tornadoes that hit Northern Alabama in 2001
occurred with the November 24, 2001 outbreak. This outbreak broke
a record for the number of tornadoes that occurred during a 24-hour
period in the state of Alabama.
- Of course, the infamous 1989 Huntsville tornado
occurred in November as well. This F4 tornado (207-260 mph winds)
tore through south Huntsville on November 15, 1989, touching down
on Redstone Arsenal at 4:30pm. The tornado eventually killed 21
people, injured more than 460 people, and caused more than $250
million in damages.
This the perfect time of the year to check your preparedness
plans. Make sure your NOAA Weather Radio has fresh batteries
in it. Make sure you have a means of receiving severe weather information.
Make sure you know what you should do if threatening weather approaches.
The routine weekly test on NOAA Weather Radio will be conducted
on Severe Weather Awareness Day. Media outlets will be working
with the National Weather Service to publicize weather safety
as well.
Additional Information
- Posters: North Alabama
| Southern Middle Tennessee
(~200kb JPG files): discusses the Fall Severe Weather
Season with photographs, charts, and other information.
- Tennessee
Valley Tornado
Database - Check out details on the
tornadoes that have hit the area since 1874--including those
that have struck during the fall months.
- NOAA
Weather Radio - Details on transmitters and SAME
codes that you can use to set your NOAA Weather Radio.
- Lightning
- A locally-developed brochure explaining how lightning works
and how dangerous lightning can be.
- Flash
Floods and River Floods - While tornadoes are a big
threat to the area, flash flooding kills
more people per year than any other weather hazard. Find
out more through this brochure.
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