List of United States tornadoes in June 2023
This page documents all tornadoes confirmed by various weather forecast offices of the National Weather Service in the United States in June 2023. On average, there are 213 confirmed tornadoes during the month.[1] These tornadoes are commonly focused across the Midwest and the central and northern Great Plains, and occasionally the Northeast, all due to their proximity to the late spring/early summer jet stream which continues to retreat farther north. Additionally, activity can sometimes increase in the Florida Peninsula as a result of early-season tropical activity.[2]
The month began with relatively little tornado activity as there were only a small number of tornado reports in the first 10 days of June and all were weak. Thereafter, an unusual weather pattern for the season developed, with a displaced jet stream for mid-June resulting in multiple rounds of severe weather primarily across the Southern United States, which led to a significant increase in the month's tornado count. The weather pattern then shifted back northward, bringing more rounds of severe and tornadic weather to the Great Plains and Mississippi Valley in late June. During that period, well over 200 tornadoes occurred across the US. Overall, activity for the month finished somewhat above average with 251 tornadoes, making June the most active month of 2023 and the most active June since 2014.
United States yearly total
EFU | EF0 | EF1 | EF2 | EF3 | EF4 | EF5 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
224 | 381 | 411 | 118 | 28 | 2 | 0 | 1,165 |
June
EFU | EF0 | EF1 | EF2 | EF3 | EF4 | EF5 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
94 | 64 | 66 | 23 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 251 |
June 1 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF0 | SSW of Peever | Roberts | SD | 45.461°N 97.04°W | 19:45 | 0.01 mi (0.016 km) | 10 yd (9.1 m) |
A brief landspout tornado was photographed.[3] | |||||||
EFU | SSE of Darien | Walworth | WI | 42.5517°N 88.6857°W | 00:24–00:25 | 0.01 mi (0.016 km) | 10 yd (9.1 m) |
A trained storm spotter reported a brief landspout tornado. No damage was reported.[4] | |||||||
EFU | ENE of Larslan | Daniels | MT | 48.6°N 106.01°W | 01:56–02:06 | 1.5 mi (2.4 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
Law enforcement and the public reported a landspout tornado causing no damage.[5] | |||||||
June 2 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EFU | WSW of Seminole | Gaines | TX | 32.666°N 102.996°W | 18:29–18:36 | 0.25 mi (0.40 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A tornado was documented by storm chasers and lasted only 29 seconds before lifting. No damage was found.[6] | |||||||
EFU | NE of Fort Stockton | Pecos | TX | 30.95°N 102.818°W | 18:29–18:39 | 4.41 mi (7.10 km) | 25 yd (23 m) |
Several storm chasers reported this tornado that lifted a few minutes after it was reported. The tornado stayed in a rural area as it moved southeast over railroad tracks before lifting prior to crossing FM 2037. No damage was found or reported.[7]> | |||||||
EF1 | ESE of Fort Stockton | Pecos | TX | 30.87°N 102.66°W | 18:57–19:15 | 2.25 mi (3.62 km) | 125 yd (114 m) |
Multiple trees were snapped or uprooted.[8] | |||||||
EFU | SW of Sheffield | Pecos, Terrell | TX | 30.63°N 102.28°W | 20:41–21:23 | 20.5 mi (33.0 km) | 25 yd (23 m) |
An eyewitness observed a tornado in its dissipating stages. It did not cause damage.[9] | |||||||
EFU | W of Aurora | Hamilton | NE | 40.82°N 98.04°W | 21:09–21:13 | 4.75 mi (7.64 km) | — |
Path of landspout estimated by photos and footage of the landspout tornado.[10] | |||||||
EFU | E of Marquette | Hamilton | NE | 41.01°N 97.98°W | 21:29–21:31 | 1.77 mi (2.85 km) | — |
Landspout observed and estimated path by emergency manager.[11] | |||||||
EF0 | NW of Central City to E of Archer | Merrick | NE | 41.16°N 98.04°W | 21:53–21:58 | 3.82 mi (6.15 km) | 40 yd (37 m) |
An EF0 was confirmed by NWS Grand Island. Preliminary information.[12] | |||||||
EFU | S of Dryden, TX | Terrell (TX), Acuña (COA) | TX, COA | 29.96°N 102.14°W | 23:45–00:34 | 21.2 mi (34.1 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
A well-documented tornado occurred for nearly an hour and crossed the international border into Mexico where it likely continued on. It occurred over a remote area and any damage was inaccessible.[13] | |||||||
June 3 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF0 | Southeastern Amarillo | Potter | TX | 35.1871°N 101.8138°W | 00:50–00:51 | 0.24 mi (0.39 km) | 10 yd (9.1 m) |
A brief high-end EF0 tornado tossed a rusty air conditioning unit off of a Cleaners building, blew out part of a coffee shop sign, knocked down the brick siding of a gas station, and inflicted minor damage to a drive-in restaurant. Cars had windows blown out by debris and tree limbs were snapped as well.[14] | |||||||
June 5 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF0 | SE of Nara Visa | Quay | NM | 35.5943°N 103.0849°W | 23:25–23:30 | 0.22 mi (0.35 km) | 30 yd (27 m) |
A landspout tornado occurred briefly over open land.[15] | |||||||
EFU | SE of Wells | Elko | NV | 41.03°N 114.84°W | 23:25–00:25 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | 500 yd (460 m) |
The public captured photos of a tornado over mountainous terrain.[16] | |||||||
EF0 | W of Los Ranchos de Albuquerque | Bernalillo | NM | 35.1624°N 106.7662°W | 00:00–00:05 | 0.01 mi (0.016 km) | 20 yd (18 m) |
A brief landspout tornado was spotted on the mesa above Petroglyph National Monument.[17] | |||||||
June 6 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF0 | W of South Shore | Codington | SD | 45.009°N 97.049°W | 20:58 | 0.01 mi (0.016 km) | 10 yd (9.1 m) |
A photo of a landspout tornado was shared on social media.[18] | |||||||
EF0 | SE of Platteville | Weld | CO | 40.18°N 104.73°W | 23:38–23:39 | 0.01 mi (0.016 km) | 20 yd (18 m) |
A tornado touched down in an open field. No damage was observed.[19] | |||||||
June 7 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF0 | NE of Clark | Clark | SD | 44.908°N 97.71°W | 19:30 | 0.01 mi (0.016 km) | 10 yd (9.1 m) |
A landspout tornado was observed.[20] | |||||||
EF1 | S of Patrick Space Force Base | Brevard | FL | 28.2055°N 80.6073°W | 21:19–21:24 | 1 mi (1.6 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
Numerous homes sustained at least superficial damage, including 25 with minor damage and 10 with major damage. Damage included partial loss of their roofs, carports, and awnings. Between six and ten power poles were snapped, and a few trees were uprooted as well.[21] | |||||||
EFU | N of Claire City, SD | Richland | ND | 45.9378°N 97.0886°W | 00:44 | 0.01 mi (0.016 km) | 10 yd (9.1 m) |
A weak and brief spin-up tornado occurred in an open field.[22] | |||||||
June 9 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF0 | St. James Island | Franklin | FL | 29.94°N 84.51°W | 19:14–19:15 | 0.34 mi (0.55 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A brief tornado blew trees down across a U.S. highway.[23] | |||||||
EFU | NE of Hinsdale | Valley | MT | 48.41°N 107.05°W | 23:20–23:21 | 0.04 mi (0.064 km) | 10 yd (9.1 m) |
Multiple trained spotters saw a brief tornado touch the ground lofting dirt.[24] | |||||||
June 10 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EFU | SW of Comfrey | Cottonwood | MN | 44.0527°N 94.9576°W | 19:47–19:48 | 0.13 mi (0.21 km) | 10 yd (9.1 m) |
A brief landspout occurred in an open field.[25] | |||||||
EFU | SE of Gildford to W of Box Elder | Hill | MT | 48.4065°N 110.1916°W | 20:09–20:15 | 2.11 mi (3.40 km) | 60 yd (55 m) |
Broadcast media shared photos of a tornado.[26] | |||||||
EFU | W of Lake Wilson | Murray | MN | 43.9909°N 95.998°W | 22:43–22:44 | 0.09 mi (0.14 km) | 10 yd (9.1 m) |
A brief landspout was photographed by numerous people causing no visible damage.[27] | |||||||
June 11 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF1 | NNE of Grimsley to W of Rugby | Fentress | TN | 36.32°N 84.96°W | 21:30–21:49 | 11.32 mi (18.22 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
An EF1 tornado snapped or uprooted several hundred trees. Over a dozen outbuildings and barns were demolished. Several houses sustained roof and window damage as well.[28] | |||||||
EF1 | N of Crossville | Cumberland | TN | 35.98°N 85.08°W | 21:59–22:03 | 2.17 mi (3.49 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A house was blown completely off its foundation, several outbuildings were damaged, and a hotel sustained minor roof damage.[29] | |||||||
EF1 | N of Robbins to SW of Helenwood | Scott | TN | 36.3919°N 84.6028°W | 22:04–22:11 | 3.4 mi (5.5 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
Numerous trees were uprooted.[30] | |||||||
EF1 | SE of Grimsley | Fentress | TN | 36.25°N 84.96°W | 22:58–23:02 | 2.33 mi (3.75 km) | 30 yd (27 m) |
Dozens of trees were snapped or uprooted. Fallen trees caused additional damage to two homes and a few outbuildings.[31] | |||||||
EF0 | S of Tipp City | Miami | OH | 39.9326°N 84.176°W | 23:23–23:24 | 0.6 mi (0.97 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
Part of the roof was lifted and removed from a detached garage. Some roofing material was tossed upward of 200 yards (180 m). Large tree branches were snapped.[32] | |||||||
EF0 | Christiansburg | Champaign | OH | 40.0534°N 84.0233°W | 23:35–23:36 | 0.83 mi (1.34 km) | 125 yd (114 m) |
A weak tornado downed numerous tree branches.[33] | |||||||
EF1 | SW of Houston | Chickasaw | MS | 33.8572°N 89.0784°W | 02:34–02:36 | 0.86 mi (1.38 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
A brief tornado caused significant damage to a manufactured home, which was slid off its foundation blocks, sustained significant roof removal, and had both a wall and an attached patio partially collapsed. A nearby residential home sustained minor roof damage, had its front porch partially uplifted, and had its carport tossed. A portion of the metal roof was ripped from an outbuilding. Multiple trees were snapped or uprooted.[34] | |||||||
June 12 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EFU | N of Corinth | Jones | TX | 32.87°N 99.86°W | 05:35–05:39 | 0.043 mi (0.069 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
Law enforcement reported a tornado.[35] | |||||||
EF0 | WNW of Manchester | York | PA | 40.0839°N 76.7746°W | 17:30–17:32 | 0.33 mi (0.53 km) | 130 yd (120 m) |
A few trees were uprooted.[36] | |||||||
June 13 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EFU | E of Felt | Cimarron | OK | 36.5721°N 102.6201°W | 21:06–21:09 | 0.91 mi (1.46 km) | 35 yd (32 m) |
A well-documented tornado occurred over open field.[37] | |||||||
EFU | ESE of Felt | Cimarron | OK | 36.5312°N 102.5502°W | 21:19–21:22 | 1.87 mi (3.01 km) | 30 yd (27 m) |
Storm chasers and trained storm spotters observed a tornado over an open field. It did not cause damage.[38] | |||||||
EFU | WSW of Kerrick | Dallam | TX | 36.4595°N 102.4438°W | 21:50–21:53 | 1.35 mi (2.17 km) | 35 yd (32 m) |
Storm chasers and trained storm spotters observed a tornado over an open field. It did not cause damage.[39] | |||||||
EFU | SE of Rock River | Albany | WY | 41.68°N 105.82°W | 00:44–00:50 | 2.36 mi (3.80 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
A tornado was reported over open land that caused no damage.[40] | |||||||
June 14 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF1 | W of Morris | Clay, Quitman | GA | 31.7663°N 85.0031°W | 15:37–15:44 | 3.63 mi (5.84 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
Numerous trees were snapped or uprooted. The tornado continued through inaccessible areas.[41] | |||||||
EF1 | Abbeville | Henry | AL | 31.5692°N 85.2818°W | 15:40–15:55 | 2.14 mi (3.44 km) | 160 yd (150 m) |
An outbuilding was destroyed, with the roof removed and walls collapsed. A small office building sustained significant roof damage, more outbuildings were destroyed, and several concrete memorial monuments were toppled. Two homes had substantial roof loss, with one also having siding loss and a damaged porch. Numerous trees were either snapped or uprooted as well.[42] | |||||||
EF1 | Eufaula | Barbour | AL | 31.8562°N 85.1877°W | 17:09–17:20 | 3.89 mi (6.26 km) | 350 yd (320 m) |
Numerous trees were snapped or uprooted, with one downed tree causing severe damage to a home. The side of a metal building structure was ripped off, and three units of an apartment complex sustained partial roof damage. The tornado dissipated over Walter F. George Lake.[43] | |||||||
EF2 | E of Wright Patman Lake to NNE of Bloomburg | Cass | TX | 33.24°N 94.22°W | 17:43–17:54 | 8.92 mi (14.36 km) | 500 yd (460 m) |
This large, strong tornado first touched down on the eastern banks of Wright Patman Lake. A home had its roof peeled off, and an industrial facility was heavily damaged, with its roof and internal walls destroyed. Along the path, hundreds of trees were snapped or uprooted. Multiple vehicles were flipped on US 59, before the tornado dissipated near the Arkansas state line.[44] | |||||||
EF2 | SSW of Blakely to NE of Nicholasville | Early, Baker | GA | 31.3570°N 84.9454°W | 18:04–18:41 | 18.88 mi (30.38 km) | 700 yd (640 m) |
A chain-link fence was damaged, and a wooden fence was blown down near Blakely. Two homes sustained significant roof damage, a barn had collapsed walls, several large sheds were destroyed, and a double-wide manufactured home lost its roof and a couple exterior walls. Many pine trees were downed and snapped along the path. The tornado dissipated immediately after crossing into Baker County.[45] | |||||||
EF1 | NNW of Newton | Baker | GA | 31.397°N 84.422°W | 18:54–19:15 | 3.6 mi (5.8 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
A pivot irrigation system was flipped and numerous trees were downed.[46] | |||||||
EF0 | NNW of Ashburn | Turner | GA | 31.74°N 83.68°W | 19:45–19:46 | 0.09 mi (0.14 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A spotter reported a brief tornado touchdown in a rural area. No damage was reported.[47] | |||||||
EF1 | N of Pachitla | Randolph | GA | 31.7995°N 84.709°W | 21:40–21:43 | 1.36 mi (2.19 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A brief tornado damaged the roof of a single family home, a church, a manufactured home, and several stands of trees. This tornado occurred simultaneously with another EF1 tornado at a distance of less than 500 yards (460 m).[48] | |||||||
EF1 | N of Pachitla | Randolph | GA | 31.7892°N 84.7104°W | 21:40–21:43 | 3.26 mi (5.25 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A grain silo was partially destroyed, several houses and manufactured homes were damaged, and trees were damaged as well. This tornado occurred simultaneously with another EF1 tornado at a distance of less than 500 yards (460 m).[49] | |||||||
EF0 | NE of Weber | Berrien | GA | 31.24°N 83.14°W | 22:35–22:36 | 0.1 mi (0.16 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A brief tornado was spotted. No damage was reported.[50] | |||||||
EF0 | WSW of Leefield | Bulloch | GA | 32.4125°N 81.6346°W | 23:08–23:09 | 0.19 mi (0.31 km) | 250 yd (230 m) |
Several trees were snapped or uprooted.[51] | |||||||
EF1 | S of Tusculum | Effingham | GA | 32.3572°N 81.438°W | 23:27–23:35 | 7.04 mi (11.33 km) | 280 yd (260 m) |
A tornado snapped or uprooted numerous trees, and removed small amounts of roof fascia and shingles from a few homes. The tornado was accompanied by a large swath of straight-line wind damage along its southern flank.[52] | |||||||
EF0 | St. George Island | Franklin | FL | 29.6226°N 84.9496°W | 23:43–23:48 | 0.44 mi (0.71 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A waterspout made landfall on the western end of Saint George Island, causing minor damage to a home.[53] |
June 15 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF0 | NE of Faxon | Comanche | OK | 34.485°N 98.54°W | 21:58–22:08 | 3.8 mi (6.1 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
Trees and shingles were damaged.[54] | |||||||
EF2 | S of Perryton (1st tornado) | Ochiltree | TX | 36.1526°N 100.9489°W | 22:02–22:35 | 17.35 mi (27.92 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
An unusually long-lived landspout tornado remained over mostly open grassland. It snapped power poles along SH 70, which was the basis for the low-end EF2 rating. Some prairie scrub brush were ripped out of the ground as well. Several other landspout tornadoes also formed in this area, including a twin EF0 tornado to this tornado.[55] | |||||||
EF2 | Northern Toledo | Lucas | OH | 41.7296°N 83.5426°W | 22:06–22:10 | 2 mi (3.2 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
A strong tornado touched down in the northern part of Toledo, causing extensive damage in the Point Place neighborhood. The second floor of a medical lab building was partially destroyed. Windows were blown out of a strip mall and a gas station. Numerous trees and several power poles were snapped. Tree limbs fell onto homes, power lines, and vehicles. The tornado lifted over the Maumee River.[56] | |||||||
EF3 | Perryton | Ochiltree | TX | 36.4135°N 100.8302°W | 22:06–22:17 | 6.31 mi (10.15 km) | 880 yd (800 m) |
3 deaths – A large and intense low-end EF3 tornado touched down northwest of Perryton and moved southeastward toward town. The tornado first crossed Loop 143, and struck a mobile home park, completely destroying multiple mobile homes, one of which caught on fire. Dozens more residences were damaged or destroyed as the tornado continued southeast, and multiple vehicles were destroyed as well. The tornado then moved directly through downtown Perryton, destroying multiple retail stores, downing a cell tower, and bending a 200-foot self-supported microwave tower in half. The tornado then turned slightly east, destroying large industrial buildings on the far-east side of Perryton. A guyed communications tower was toppled, and multiple mobile homes were also destroyed here. The tornado then tracked into an open field, causing minor ground scouring to vegetation. After moving across an open field for multiple minutes, the tornado began to rapidly weaken and dissipate. In all, nearly 200 homes were damaged or destroyed by the tornado.[55] | |||||||
EF0 | Northern Detroit Beach to SW of Estral Beach | Monroe | MI | 41.9351°N 83.3316°W | 22:09–22:18 | 4.77 mi (7.68 km) | 400 yd (370 m) |
Damage was confined to snapped or uprooted trees before the tornado moved into Lake Erie.[57] | |||||||
EF0 | S of Geronimo | Cotton | OK | 34.42°N 98.402°W | 22:10–22:12 | 1.2 mi (1.9 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
An EF0 tornado damaged barns and shingles.[58] | |||||||
EFU | WNW of Duncan | Stephens | OK | 34.536°N 98.127°W | 22:11–22:13 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
Spotters reported a tornado that did no damage.[59] | |||||||
EF0 | S of Perryton (2nd tornado) | Ochiltree | TX | 36.1412°N 100.9046°W | 22:12–22:30 | 12.26 mi (19.73 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
This landspout tornado, which formed as a twin to the larger EF2 landspout tornado above, remained over mostly open grassland as it tracked about a 1⁄2 mile (0.80 km) south of the stronger tornado. No damage was reported.[60] | |||||||
EF0 | Maumee Bay | Lucas | OH | 41.6864°N 83.359°W | 22:28 | 0.24 mi (0.39 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A waterspout developed over Maumee Bay and moved onshore as a tornado in the Maumee Bay State Park, toppling several dead trees and damaging the boardwalk.[61] | |||||||
EF0 | E of Empire City | Stephens | OK | 34.416°N 97.958°W | 22:34–22:36 | 0.8 mi (1.3 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
A storm chaser saw a tornado, however no damage was reported.[62] | |||||||
EF1 | Southwestern Comanche | Stephens | OK | 34.364°N 97.99°W | 22:37–22:38 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | 20 yd (18 m) |
A spotter reported a tornado moving into the southwestern side of Comanche. Trees were downed and outbuilding was damaged just outside of town while an apartment building was damaged in town.[63] | |||||||
EF2 | S of Oak Harbor | Ottawa | OH | 41.4688°N 83.1457°W | 22:49–22:58 | 3.45 mi (5.55 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
A strong tornado destroyed seven barns and damaged five homes, ripping the roofs off a few of them. As many as 10 cattle were killed.[64] | |||||||
EF1 | NE of Lindsey | Sandusky | OH | 41.4494°N 83.1558°W | 22:57–22:58 | 0.15 mi (0.24 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
A very brief tornado toppled seven trees, two of which landed on a home. One more tree was snapped at its base.[65] | |||||||
EFU | NE of Sugden | Jefferson | OK | 34.1107°N 97.9429°W | 22:58–23:00 | 0.8 mi (1.3 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
Storm chasers observed a tornado.[66] | |||||||
EF1 | WNW of Loco | Stephens | OK | 34.353°N 97.774°W | 23:03–23:05 | 1.5 mi (2.4 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A tornado uprooted and snapped trees.[67] | |||||||
EF2 | SE of Loco to NW of Healdton | Stephens, Jefferson | OK | 34.299°N 97.653°W | 23:16–23:29 | 4.1 mi (6.6 km) | 1,000 yd (910 m) |
A large and slow-moving tornado caused substantial damage to many trees and a number of residential houses and manufactured homes.[68][69] | |||||||
EF0 | WSW of Castalia | Sandusky | OH | 41.3867°N 82.922°W | 23:18–23:19 | 0.33 mi (0.53 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A brief tornado partially destroyed the metal roof of an outbuilding; metal roofing was thrown into a field. Shingles were tossed from a home.[70] | |||||||
EF1 | S of Higgins, TX | Lipscomb (TX), Ellis (OK) | TX, OK | 36.08°N 100.00°W | 23:29–23:36 | ≥4.79 mi (7.71 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
Storm chasers documented a tornado that moved over open county grasslands before crossing into Oklahoma, where it caused scattered damage to trees.[71][72] | |||||||
EF0 | Bellevue | Sandusky | OH | 41.2845°N 82.8514°W | 23:40–23:42 | 0.93 mi (1.50 km) | 500 yd (460 m) |
A weak tornado downed several power poles and snapped large tree branches.[73] | |||||||
EFU | SW of Durham | Roger Mills | OK | 35.796°N 99.978°W | 23:47–23:50 | 1 mi (1.6 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A storm chaser reported a tornado. No damage was known to have occurred.[74] | |||||||
EF2 | S of Monroeville to Peru Township to W of Fairfield Township | Huron | OH | 41.2172°N 82.7036°W | 23:47–00:04 | 8.89 mi (14.31 km) | 2,200 yd (2,000 m) |
An EF2 tornado heavily damaged several residences, including one home shifted completely off its foundation. A piece of slate roofing was torn off a building and impaled into a tree. An outbuilding was completely demolished, with debris from the structure tossed 0.25 miles (0.40 km). Additional barns, outbuildings, and silos were heavily damaged.[75] | |||||||
EF0 | S of Monroeville | Huron | OH | 41.1924°N 82.7052°W | 23:50–23:53 | 1.73 mi (2.78 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
A tree was uprooted and several large branches were snapped.[76] | |||||||
EF1 | N of North Fairfield to Greenwich Township | Huron | OH | 41.1406°N 82.6025°W | 23:59–00:17 | 9.92 mi (15.96 km) | 1,100 yd (1,000 m) |
Widespread tree and power line damage occurred. Downed trees landed on some homes. Roofing material was ripped from a few buildings. A large sign was ripped off the side of a building, and several light and power poles were leaning or snapped. A manufactured home and several silos were heavily damaged. A residence sustained significant damage to its second floor. Multiple outbuildings had their roofs displaced, and a deteriorating barn was collapsed.[77] | |||||||
EF0 | W of North Fairfield | Huron | OH | 41.1163°N 82.6608°W | 00:03–00:04 | 0.66 mi (1.06 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
Some tree damage occurred.[78] | |||||||
EF1 | N of Greenwich | Huron | OH | 41.0656°N 82.563°W | 00:18–00:24 | 4.05 mi (6.52 km) | 250 yd (230 m) |
Several trees were snapped or downed. Several silos, some equipment, an outbuilding, and an office were damaged.[77] | |||||||
EF0 | NE of Marietta | Love | OK | 33.95°N 97.115°W | 00:26–00:27 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | 10 yd (9.1 m) |
A research meteorologist observed a tornado that did light tree damage.[79] | |||||||
EF0 | NE of Nankin | Ashland | OH | 40.93°N 82.27°W | 00:47–00:49 | 1.2 mi (1.9 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
The roof of a house was damaged, a barn lost part of its roof, and a chicken coop was damaged as well. An outbuilding had its walls and garage door pushed out, with part of its insulation thrown into a field. In addition, several trees were downed, with their branches snapped.[80][81] | |||||||
EF1 | SE of Henrietta | Clay | TX | 33.756°N 98.167°W | 01:02–01:08 | 2.5 mi (4.0 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
A large tree was downed, an outbuilding was destroyed and one house received roof damage.[82] | |||||||
EF2 | West Pensacola to Pensacola Beach | Escambia | FL | 30.4132°N 87.2725°W | 01:35–02:08 | 8.58 mi (13.81 km) | 450 yd (410 m) |
This tornado touched down in West Pensacola, snapping multiple trees as it moved through Warrington. It then crossed Pensacola Bay, passing just west of Gulf Breeze before moving onshore Pensacola Beach at EF2 intensity, inflicting significant damage to homes that were built to withstand significant hurricanes. This included several homes that had several pieces of their siding ripped off, a few homes that lost 20-60 percent of their metal roofing material, and several others that had garage doors blown in and destroyed, leading to the failure of exterior walls. One home that was under construction had its entire top floor and roof removed. A large dumpster weighing several hundred pounds was tossed up to 70 yards (64 m), and at least two boats were tossed; one was found 30 yards (27 m) from its boat lift, while the second drifted about 1 mile (1.6 km) downstream. The tornado then moved into the Gulf of Mexico before dissipating.[83] |
June 16 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF0 | W of Loxley | Baldwin | AL | 30.6182°N 87.7945°W | 05:21–05:22 | 0.29 mi (0.47 km) | 75 yd (69 m) |
Spotty tree damage occurred, including two trees that were uprooted.[84] | |||||||
EF0 | SW of Cabbage Grove | Taylor | FL | 30.175°N 83.897°W | 05:43–05:45 | 0.97 mi (1.56 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A brief tornado touched down causing tree damage.[85] | |||||||
EF1 | S of Panola, TX to NW of Keatchie, LA | Panola (TX), Caddo (LA) | TX, LA | 32.2559°N 94.0744°W | 06:15–06:25 | 7.73 mi (12.44 km) | 844 yd (772 m) |
This tornado caused widespread tree damage, including one tree that fell on a home.[86][87] | |||||||
EF0 | S of Scanlon to ENE of Econfina | Taylor | FL | 30.08°N 83.88°W | 06:20–06:44 | 7.23 mi (11.64 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
A well-defined TDS appeared on radar. Only tree damage occurred.[88] | |||||||
EF0 | SW of Hell's Half Acre to S of Goose Pasture | Jefferson, Taylor | FL | 30.126°N 84.044°W | 07:09–07:23 | 6.37 mi (10.25 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
Trees were damaged.[89] | |||||||
EF0 | NNE of Scanlon to SE of Cabbage Grove | Taylor | FL | 30.16°N 83.88°W | 07:30–07:41 | 3.42 mi (5.50 km) | 75 yd (69 m) |
No structures were impacted by this tornado, only trees.[90] | |||||||
EF1 | S of Perry | Taylor | FL | 30.0829°N 83.594°W | 07:45–07:50 | 1.26 mi (2.03 km) | 80 yd (73 m) |
A large metal building lost roof panels and tore a metal roof off of a porch. An outbuilding had its roof peeled back, and trees were snapped and uprooted.[91] | |||||||
EF1 | Southern Vicksburg to W of Learned | Warren | MS | 32.2456°N 90.9258°W | 09:40–09:47 | 8.54 mi (13.74 km) | 900 yd (820 m) |
A large tornado caused widespread tree damage, with numerous trees snapped or uprooted. One large tree fell on a home.[92] | |||||||
EF1 | SE of Utica | Hinds | MS | 32.0928°N 90.6178°W | 09:55–10:01 | 6.5 mi (10.5 km) | 400 yd (370 m) |
Numerous trees were snapped or uprooted, and several utility poles and lines were downed. The tornado may have been anticyclonic based on radar.[93] | |||||||
EF1 | E of Bucks | Mobile, Baldwin | AL | 31.0091°N 87.9701°W | 13:00–13:07 | 7.23 mi (11.64 km) | 30 yd (27 m) |
An unusual anticyclonic tornado snapped and uprooted multiple trees. The tornado was itself associated with the anticyclonic bookend vortex of a powerful mesoscale convective system.[94] | |||||||
EF1 | E of Compass to WNW of Wagontown | Chester | PA | 40.0273°N 75.9052°W | 15:10–15:14 | 1.8 mi (2.9 km) | 250 yd (230 m) |
An EF1 tornado snapped or uprooted trees and power lines. Fallen trees caused damage to a fence and caused a utility pole to snap.[95] | |||||||
EF0 | E of Buddtown to SE of New Lisbon | Burlington | NJ | 39.9291°N 74.6873°W | 16:55–17:01 | 3.4 mi (5.5 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
A weak tornado snapped or uprooted multiple trees as it moved through a sparsely populated area. One tree fell on a power line.[96] | |||||||
EF0 | Smithfield to S of Bartlett | Isle of Wight | VA | 36.988°N 76.648°W | 20:36–20:58 | 8.46 mi (13.62 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
Damage was inflicted to numerous trees and a few roofs.[97] |
June 17 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF0 | W of Irvington | Mobile | AL | 30.4897°N 88.2385°W | 05:21–05:28 | 3.92 mi (6.31 km) | 80 yd (73 m) |
The underskirt of two manufactured homes were damaged. Multiple trees were snapped. A section of a farm outbuilding was blown out, with metal from the structure tossed to the east.[98] | |||||||
EF0 | NE of Elsanor | Baldwin | AL | 30.6037°N 87.555°W | 21:30–21:47 | 3.56 mi (5.73 km) | 20 yd (18 m) |
Some tree limbs were snapped.[99] | |||||||
EF0 | WNW of Thatcher | Las Animas | CO | 37.72°N 104.45°W | 21:50–21:53 | 2.04 mi (3.28 km) | 10 yd (9.1 m) |
A weak tornado was captured on posted on social media.[100] | |||||||
EFU | NE of Rotan to NW of Hamlin | Stonewall | TX | 32.99°N 100.35°W | 23:18–23:49 | 4.29 mi (6.90 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
Numerous storm chasers reported a tornado over open ranch land.[101] | |||||||
EFU | NW of Hamlin | Fisher | TX | 32.92°N 100.21°W | 23:45–23:55 | 1.04 mi (1.67 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
Law enforcement reported a tornado.[102] | |||||||
EF1 | SW of Rosston to N of Laverne | Beaver, Harper | OK | 36.746°N 100.00°W | 00:43–00:50 | 7.1 mi (11.4 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
Trees, power lines, the roof of a home, and a barn were damaged.[103] |
June 18 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF1 | ENE of Collinsville to WSW of Foyil | Rogers | OK | 36.392°N 95.763°W | 05:40–05:52 | 10.9 mi (17.5 km) | 1,000 yd (910 m) |
A large tornado snapped and uprooted numerous trees, damaged multiple homes and outbuildings, and toppled numerous power poles.[104] | |||||||
EF1 | SW of Chelsea | Rogers | OK | 36.518°N 95.565°W | 05:56–06:03 | 5.2 mi (8.4 km) | 800 yd (730 m) |
Numerous trees were snapped or uprooted, and numerous power poles were toppled.[105] | |||||||
EF1 | S of Strang | Mayes | OK | 36.391°N 95.170°W | 06:09–06:15 | 4.1 mi (6.6 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
Numerous trees were snapped or uprooted.[106] | |||||||
EF2 | Prairie View | Logan | AR | 35.3259°N 93.552°W | 06:12–06:17 | 5.4 mi (8.7 km) | 700 yd (640 m) |
Five chicken houses were completely destroyed and multiple others sustained damage. One outbuilding was flattened and another had its roofing material removed. Roofing was ripped off a house, a two-car garage was blown off its foundation, and trees were snapped or uprooted.[107] | |||||||
EF0 | S of Menifee | Perry | AR | 35.0855°N 92.5485°W | 07:12–07:13 | 0.2 mi (0.32 km) | 60 yd (55 m) |
The roofs of small outbuildings and homes were damaged. A chicken coop was blown apart and tossed into the window of a nearby manufactured home. A carport was blown sideways, and trees were damaged.[108] | |||||||
EF0 | Pine Island | Lee | FL | 26.6086°N 82.1149°W | 15:10–15:11 | 0.01 mi (0.016 km) | 10 yd (9.1 m) |
A brief tornado, only on the ground for a few seconds, damaged a recently constructed metal outdoor freezer.[109] | |||||||
EF1 | ENE of Quitman | Clarke | MS | 32.0608°N 88.6574°W | 15:53–15:55 | 2 mi (3.2 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
A brief tornado snapped numerous tree branches and downed a few trees. A few trees were downed onto a home and a vehicle. An outbuilding had a portion of its roof peeled back.[110] | |||||||
EF1 | SW of Pocahontas | Randolph | AR | 36.2184°N 91.0453°W | 21:57–22:08 | 5 mi (8.0 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
Multiple trees were snapped or uprooted. A large tree branch caused negligible damage to a roof.[111] | |||||||
EF0 | NE of Canton | Madison | MS | 32.7065°N 89.9481°W | 00:37–00:41 | 1.6 mi (2.6 km) | 250 yd (230 m) |
A weak tornado snapped or uprooted multiple trees, damaged a home's metal roof, and displaced a roof antenna.[110] | |||||||
EF1 | NW of Ridgeland | Madison | MS | 32.4296°N 90.1404°W | 00:57–00:59 | 1.4 mi (2.3 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
Multiple trees were damaged, a fence was downed, and a historic church was pushed off its blocks. A few homes and a business sustained shingle damage; the business suffered tin damage as well. A power pole was downed.[110] | |||||||
EF1 | N of Morton | Scott | MS | 32.4526°N 89.6347°W | 01:04–01:18 | 6.48 mi (10.43 km) | 350 yd (320 m) |
Trees were snapped.[110] | |||||||
EF2 | SE of Calion to NNE of Strong | Union | AR | 33.2599°N 92.4481°W | 01:15–01:42 | 10.31 mi (16.59 km) | 1,320 yd (1,210 m) |
A strong tornado impacted a chicken farm, destroying three of the five chicken coops. Nearby barns and outbuildings were damaged as well. Numerous trees were snapped or uprooted. One tree fell on a manufactured home.[112] | |||||||
EF1 | NE of Brandon | Rankin | MS | 32.3554°N 89.9352°W | 01:30–01:38 | 2 mi (3.2 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
Multiple trees were uprooted, a utility line was downed, and a home sustained shingle damage.[110] | |||||||
EF0 | N of Pelahatchie | Rankin | MS | 32.3565°N 89.811°W | 01:56–01:59 | 1 mi (1.6 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
Minor tree damage occurred.[110] | |||||||
EF2 | SE of Florence | Rankin | MS | 32.1226°N 90.1315°W | 02:05–02:25 | 6.06 mi (9.75 km) | 400 yd (370 m) |
Several homes sustained minor to moderate roof damage, the walls of an outbuilding were collapsed, and an old chicken house was damaged. The fence around a basketball court was toppled, the porch of a house was damaged, and trees were damaged as well.[110] | |||||||
EF0 | SSE of Florence | Rankin | MS | 32.118°N 90.0166°W | 02:21–02:23 | 0.92 mi (1.48 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
A few trees were uprooted, and tree limbs were broken.[110] | |||||||
EF1 | SSE of Pelahatchie | Rankin | MS | 32.2446°N 89.7625°W | 02:26–02:39 | 5.8 mi (9.3 km) | 450 yd (410 m) |
An EF1 tornado caused damage to trees.[110] | |||||||
EF0 | NW of Raleigh | Smith | MS | 32.0835°N 89.6099°W | 03:24–03:25 | 0.50 mi (0.80 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
Several trees were damaged or downed.[110] | |||||||
EF0 | NW of Raleigh | Smith | MS | 32.0465°N 89.563°W | 03:27–03:32 | 2.64 mi (4.25 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
A few trees were downed, and tree branches were broken.[110] | |||||||
EF1 | N of Sylvarena | Smith | MS | 32.0911°N 89.4079°W | 03:53–04:01 | 2.54 mi (4.09 km) | 600 yd (550 m) |
Numerous trees and a few homes were damaged. Multiple power lines were downed as well.[110] | |||||||
EF1 | NNW of Sylvarena | Smith | MS | 32.0856°N 89.4027°W | 03:59–04:12 | 4.48 mi (7.21 km) | 850 yd (780 m) |
A few trees were damaged, and a few tree limbs were downed.[110] | |||||||
EF3 | N of Bay Springs to ENE of Louin | Jasper | MS | 32.0179°N 89.2884°W | 04:30–04:48 | 7.65 mi (12.31 km) | 1,350 yd (1,230 m) |
1 death – Loading trucks were flipped and other vehicles were damaged at a farm, and three metal buildings were demolished while three others were severely damaged by this large, intense tornado. Roughly a dozen homes were severely damaged, with significant roof loss and wall collapse, nearly a dozen manufactured homes were destroyed, with some being tossed considerable distances, and additional site-built homes were damaged. Substantial tree and power line damage occurred along the path, including double wooden pole transmission frames that were toppled. In addition to the fatality, 25 people were injured.[80][110] |
June 19 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF1 | Columbia | Marion | MS | 31.2508°N 89.8261°W | 13:49–13:53 | 2 mi (3.2 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
A brief tornado snapped or uprooted trees. One tree caused roof damage to a home upon falling.[110] | |||||||
EF1 | Miramar Beach | Walton | FL | 30.3868°N 86.3288°W | 16:16–16:21 | 1.62 mi (2.61 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
Several trees were snapped or uprooted. A few homes and a small business sustained minor roof damage. A condo's storm shutter and multiple fences sustained damage.[113] | |||||||
EF1 | WNW of Bon Secour | Baldwin | AL | 30.341°N 87.791°W | 18:00–18:03 | 0.51 mi (0.82 km) | 230 yd (210 m) |
A farm building with reinforced hurricane straps had its entire roof ripped off and wrapped around trees. Multiple trees were snapped or uprooted, including by strong inflow winds. A garage attached to a house had about half of its roof removed. One small outbuilding was destroyed and another was damaged.[84] | |||||||
EF2 | Moss Point | Jackson | MS | 30.4187°N 88.5591°W | 19:51–19:57 | 2.14 mi (3.44 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
A strong tornado caused minor to moderate siding and roof damage to multiple homes. A carport was collapsed, a motorhome was overturned, and numerous trees were snapped or uprooted. The most severe damage occurred to a church and a bank, both of which had most of their roofs removed and several windows blown out. The church's brick signage was completely destroyed as well. Multiple homes in this area sustained more severe roof damage. Six people were injured.[114] |
June 20 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF1 | NNE of Carpenter, ND to William Lake Provincial Park, MB | Rolette (ND), Morton (MB) | ND, MB | 48.9983°N 99.9603°W | 02:35 | ≥4.0 mi (6.5 km) | ≥230 yd (210 m) |
Aerial surveys revealed a tornado touched down just south of the Canada–United States border and moved northeast into Canada. Damage was confined to trees. Only the Canadian portion of the track was surveyed.[115][116] | |||||||
June 21 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EFU | ENE of Lorenzo | Cheyenne | NE | 41.0583°N 103.0234°W | 19:33 | 0.59 mi (0.95 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A local emergency manager observed a brief tornado.[117] | |||||||
EFU | SSW of Padroni | Logan | CO | 40.7109°N 103.1988°W | 19:44–19:47 | 0.46 mi (0.74 km) | — |
A storm chaser observed a tornado that caused no damage.[118] | |||||||
EFU | SE of Akron | Washington | CO | 40.0657°N 102.9894°W | 21:05–21:10 | 0.67 mi (1.08 km) | — |
A storm chaser observed a tornado over open fields.[119][118] | |||||||
EFU | NNE of Pawnee Pass | Logan | CO | — | 21:35–21:46 | 1.5 mi (2.4 km) | — |
Trained storm spotters observed a tornado.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (1st tornado) | Washington | CO | 39.9991°N 103.1896°W | 22:10–22:11 | 0.3 mi (0.48 km) | 25 yd (23 m) |
A storm chaser observed a brief rope tornado over open fields.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Claude | Armstrong | TX | 34.95°N 101.38°W | 22:18-22:23 | 0.97 mi (1.56 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
A tornado occurred over an open field.[119] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (2nd tornado) | Washington | CO | 40.0207°N 103.2032°W | 22:18–22:22 | 0.51 mi (0.82 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
Storm chasers observed a cone tornado.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (3rd tornado) | Washington | CO | — | 22:25–22:26 | 1 mi (1.6 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
Storm chasers observed a tornado.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (4th tornado) | Washington | CO | 40.0200°N 103.1971°W | 22:28–22:29 | 0.25 mi (0.40 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A brief tornado occurred over open fields.[118] | |||||||
EF2 | S of Akron (5th tornado) | Washington | CO | 40.0225°N 103.2085°W | 22:28–22:35 | 1.5 mi (2.4 km) | 400 yd (370 m) |
Storm chasers observed a tornado that snapped power poles along SH 63.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (6th tornado) | Washington | CO | — | 22:29–22:30 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A storm chaser reported a brief satellite tornado in association with the 4th tornado south of Akron.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (7th tornado) | Washington | CO | — | 22:31–22:34 | 4 mi (6.4 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A storm chaser reported a second, stronger satellite tornado in association with the 4th tornado south of Akron.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (8th tornado) | Washington | CO | — | 22:36–22:37 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | — |
A storm chaser observed another developing tornado.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (9th tornado) | Washington | CO | 40.0323°N 103.2387°W | 22:37–22:38 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | — |
A storm chaser observed a tornado.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (10th tornado) | Washington | CO | 40.0329°N 103.2183°W | 22:39–22:40 | 0.25 mi (0.40 km) | — |
A storm chaser observed a brief tornado over open fields.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (11th tornado) | Washington | CO | 40.0363°N 103.2269°W | 22:40–22:41 | 0.57 mi (0.92 km) | — |
A storm chaser observed a brief tornado over open fields.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (12th tornado) | Washington | CO | — | 22:42–22:43 | 0.25 mi (0.40 km) | — |
A storm chaser observed a brief tornado.[118] | |||||||
EF1 | S of Akron (13th tornado) | Washington | CO | 40.0422°N 103.2456°W | 22:43–22:45 | 0.95 mi (1.53 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
Damage was found at a farmstead; details unspecified.[119][118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (14th tornado) | Washington | CO | 40.0397°N 103.2202°W | 22:43–22:45 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | — |
A storm chaser observed a large tornado.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (15th tornado) | Washington | CO | 40.0470°N 103.2400°W | 22:45–22:46 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | — |
A brief tornado occurred over open fields.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (16th tornado) | Washington | CO | 40.0470°N 103.2249°W | 22:45–22:46 | 0.25 mi (0.40 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A brief tornado occurred over open fields. This tornado occurred simultaneously with the preceding event.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (17th tornado) | Washington | CO | 40.0484°N 103.2352°W | 22:46–22:47 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | — |
A storm chaser observed a brief tornado over open fields.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (18th tornado) | Washington | CO | — | 22:47–22:48 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | — |
A storm chaser observed another tornado.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (19th tornado) | Washington | CO | 40.0531°N 103.2361°W | 22:48–22:49 | 0.54 mi (0.87 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
A storm chaser observed a brief tornado over open fields.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (20th tornado) | Washington | CO | — | 22:49–22:50 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | — |
A storm chaser observed a large tornado.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (21st tornado) | Washington | CO | 40.0580°N 103.2490°W | 22:50–22:51 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | — |
A storm chaser observed a brief tornado over open fields.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (22nd tornado) | Washington | CO | — | 22:51–22:52 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | — |
A storm chaser observed a new tornado.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (23rd tornado) | Washington | CO | — | 22:52–22:55 | 2 mi (3.2 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
A storm chaser observed a new tornado.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (24th tornado) | Washington | CO | — | 22:53–22:56 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | — |
A storm chaser observed a new tornado occurring simultaneously to the previous entry.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (25th tornado) | Washington | CO | 40.0632°N 103.2495°W | 22:57–23:10 | — | 400 yd (370 m) |
A storm chaser observed a large multi-vortex tornado over open fields.[118] | |||||||
EFU | S of Akron (26th tornado) | Washington | CO | 40.0756°N 103.2455°W | 23:15–23:19 | 1 mi (1.6 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A storm chaser observed a brief cone tornado over open fields.[118] | |||||||
EF2 | S of Akron (27th tornado) | Washington | CO | 40.0952°N 103.3080°W | 23:20–23:36 | 3 mi (4.8 km) | 400 yd (370 m) |
A barn and grain bins were destroyed and power poles were snapped.[118] | |||||||
EF1 | NE of Willard | Logan | CO | 40.5737°N 103.4509°W | 23:30–23:40 | 0.25 mi (0.40 km) | 15 yd (14 m) |
A brief tornado tore a large portion of a roof from a home and caused its chimney to collapse.[119][118] | |||||||
EFU | W of Woodward | Washington | CO | 39.9866°N 103.4327°W | 23:39–23:53 | — | — |
A storm chaser observed a tornado.[118] | |||||||
EFU | N of Anton (1st tornado) | Washington | CO | 39.83°N 103.21°W | 00:14–00:15 | 0.71 mi (1.14 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
Storm chasers observed a brief anticyclonic tornado.[118] | |||||||
EF2 | NW of Anton | Washington | CO | 39.8654°N 103.2302°W | 00:16–00:22 | 4.94 mi (7.95 km) | 800 yd (730 m) |
A multiple-vortex tornado snapped 15 wooden power poles.[119][118] | |||||||
EFU | N of Anton (2nd tornado) | Washington | CO | 39.8711°N 103.1946°W | 00:35–00:40 | 1 mi (1.6 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A trained spotter observed a brief cone tornado.[118] | |||||||
EFU | NNW of Anton | Washington | CO | 39.83°N 103.25°W | 00:45–01:00 | 1.02 mi (1.64 km) | — |
A trained spotter observed a tornado.[118] | |||||||
EFU | NE of Whiteflat | Motley | TX | 34.12°N 100.85°W | 00:50–00:51 | 0.18 mi (0.29 km) | 30 yd (27 m) |
Storm chasers reported a brief tornado over open country. It did not cause damage."Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.</ref> | |||||||
EF3 | NE of Whiteflat to Matador | Motley | TX | 34.12°N 100.85°W | 00:51–01:09 | 9.14 mi (14.71 km) | 600 yd (550 m) |
4 deaths – See section on this tornado – 15 people were injured. | |||||||
EF0 | SE of Lemmon | Perkins | SD | 45.8581°N 102.0424°W | 01:19–01:21 | 1.76 mi (2.83 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A tornado briefly occurred. No damage was reported.[120] | |||||||
EFU | NE of Afton | Dickens | TX | 33.82°N 100.73°W | 01:36–01:37 | 0.06 mi (0.097 km) | 30 yd (27 m) |
An off-duty NWS employee reported a brief tornado over open country. It did not cause damage.[121] | |||||||
EFU | WSW of Matador | Motley | TX | 34.01°N 100.89°W | 01:37–01:40 | 2.82 mi (4.54 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
Local media streamed footage of a tornado. It did not cause damage.[122] | |||||||
EFU | SW of Yoder | Goshen | WY | 41.886°N 104.344°W | 01:44–01:46 | 1.01 mi (1.63 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A trained spotter reported a stovepipe tornado before it quickly became rain-wrapped.[123] | |||||||
EFU | E of Dickens | Dickens | TX | 33.62°N 100.72°W | 02:18–02:19 | 0.35 mi (0.56 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A storm chaser reported a brief tornado. It did not cause damage.[124] |
June 22 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF1 | Kinston | Lenoir | NC | 35.285°N 77.586°W | 17:04–17:05 | 0.7 mi (1.1 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
At least six large windows at a Furniture Fair were bowed in or blown out. A large AC unit on the top of the store was blown off. A wooden power pole was snapped in half about 6 feet (1.8 m) off the ground. The eastern side of a Salvation Army store was bowed out. A nearby dumpster was blown about 100 yards (91 m). Some homes were damaged, and multiple trees were snapped. The tornado impacted UNC Health Care Lenoir, damaging an entrance sign and causing damage to a large section of a medical building's roof.[125] | |||||||
EF1 | NW of Allison | Hemphill | TX | 35.7°N 100.23°W | 20:41–20:55 | 10.3 mi (16.6 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
This tornado moved through rural areas north of Allison. Many trees were snapped or uprooted along its path. Two silos had their lids torn off, resulting in one of them collapsing. Two sheds and a barn had minor roof damage.[126] | |||||||
EF1 | Highlands Ranch to SW of Lone Tree | Douglas | CO | 39.5559°N 105.0159°W | 21:24–21:48 | 6.3 mi (10.1 km) | 25 yd (23 m) |
A few homes were damaged, and several trees were downed.[127] | |||||||
EFU | S of Chugwater | Laramie | WY | 41.653°N 104.8794°W | 22:42–22:45 | 3.12 mi (5.02 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A tornado briefly touched down doing no known damage.[128] | |||||||
EF0 | SSE of Peyton | El Paso | CO | 38.95°N 104.42°W | 02:08–02:10 | 0.85 mi (1.37 km) | 10 yd (9.1 m) |
A cone tornado was confirmed; damage is unspecified.[129] |
June 23 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF0 | N of Grace | Caribou | ID | 42.6424°N 111.72°W | 18:30–18:40 | 0.2 mi (0.32 km) | 10 yd (9.1 m) |
Several photographs were shared of a weak tornado in an open field.[130] | |||||||
EF0 | NE of Grainger | Sweetwater | WY | 41.6721°N 109.8193°W | 19:35–19:37 | 1.55 mi (2.49 km) | 30 yd (27 m) |
A video showed a landspout over open country.[131] | |||||||
EF0 | N of Natrona | Natrona | WY | 43.2326°N 106.82°W | 20:37–20:40 | 2.21 mi (3.56 km) | 30 yd (27 m) |
A rope tornado occurred over open country causing no damage.[132] | |||||||
EF0 | N of Kaycee | Johnson | WY | 43.7345°N 106.65°W | 20:40–20:41 | 0.53 mi (0.85 km) | 40 yd (37 m) |
A rancher reported a brief tornado[133] | |||||||
EF1 | SSW of Midwest to ESE of Edgerton | Natrona | WY | 43.2997°N 106.3486°W | 21:15–21:25 | 10.83 mi (17.43 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
A cone tornado overturned a trailer, blew fuel tanks away and damaged trees.[134] | |||||||
EFU | ESE of Ross | Converse | WY | 43.43°N 105.84°W | 22:33 | 0.25 mi (0.40 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A brief tornado occurred.[135] | |||||||
EFU | ENE of Chugwater (1st tornado) | Platte | WY | 41.7745°N 104.7474°W | 23:11 | 0.01 mi (0.016 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A tornado touched down for 21 seconds before lifting; no damage occurred.[136] | |||||||
EFU | ENE of Chugwater (2nd tornado) | Goshen | WY | 41.794°N 104.646°W | 23:29–23:37 | 3 mi (4.8 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
Numerous photos and videos showed a cone tornado over open country with no damage reported.[137] | |||||||
EF2 | North Antelope Rochelle Mine to WSW of Rochelle | Campbell, Weston | WY | 43.4986°N 105.3563°W | 23:59–01:20 | 9.81 mi (15.79 km) | 800 yd (730 m) |
A strong tornado touched down along the Campbell/Converse County Line, snapping wooden power poles in the area. It moved northeast and struck the North Antelope Rochelle Mine, the largest coal mine in the world. Twelve cars on an empty train were knocked over and eight employees were injured. The operations area was directly impacted; metal roofing was torn from buildings and buses, cars, and shipping containers were flipped. the tornado continued into Weston County blowing down trees and ripping off part of a roof on a house before lifting.[138][139] | |||||||
EFU | W of Hawk Springs | Goshen | WY | 41.7728°N 104.4151°W | 00:03–00:04 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
Storm spotters shared many photos and videos of a brief tornado over open country.[140] | |||||||
EF2 | S of Hawk Springs | Goshen | WY | 41.7762°N 104.2608°W | 00:21–00:37 | 4.72 mi (7.60 km) | 800 yd (730 m) |
Trained spotters observed this rain-wrapped tornado. An 18-wheeler was flipped along US 85, injuring the driver.[141] An irrigation pivot was partially ripped from its concrete base. Numerous power poles were snapped, and one home had a tree branch impaled into its siding near US 85.[142] | |||||||
EF1 | SE of Campo to W of Elkhart, KS | Baca | CO | 37.03°N 102.33°W | 00:33–00:56 | 8.43 mi (13.57 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
A long-lived tornado remained over mostly barren terrain. Two structures at an abandoned farmstead were damaged and power poles were downed.[143] | |||||||
EF3 | SSW of Granada | Prowers | CO | 37.9756°N 102.388°W | 00:40–01:22 | 13.12 mi (21.11 km) | 320 yd (290 m) |
This intense tornado remained largely over open countryside, impacting a few farms along its path. Early in its track, it obliterated two wooden barns and one steel barn with hardly any debris remaining from all of them. The farmstead's home was almost completely leveled, with only one interior wall left standing. Eight cattle were killed on the farm. The tornado moved southeast from the farm and downed two power poles before dissipating over open fields. This was the strongest tornado to impact Colorado since an EF3 tornado that struck Berthoud on June 4, 2015.[144][145][146] | |||||||
EF1 | E of Hawk Springs | Goshen | WY | 41.78°N 104.14°W | 00:44–00:58 | 3.9 mi (6.3 km) | 20 yd (18 m) |
Third and final tornado near Hawk Springs. A few light poles and flag poles were bent.[147] | |||||||
EFU | W of Gering | Scotts Bluff | NE | 41.821°N 103.938°W | 01:04–01:11 | 3.53 mi (5.68 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A tornado occurred over open fields near Gunsight Pass.[148] | |||||||
EFU | W of Gering | Scotts Bluff | NE | 41.85°N 103.85°W | 01:22–01:27 | 3.16 mi (5.09 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
Storm spotters observed a tornado that became rain-wrapped over open fields near Rifle Sight Pass.[149] | |||||||
EF2 | E of Gering to SE of Scottsbluff | Scotts Bluff | NE | 41.82°N 103.63°W | 01:38–01:45 | 2.48 mi (3.99 km) | 700 yd (640 m) |
A multiple-vortex tornado originated near the North Platte River and moved northeast, prompting a tornado emergency. It severely damaged a home, scattering debris up to 0.5 mi (0.80 km) away, before reversing direction and moving near the same areas. It passed over wastewater treatment ponds, sucking water from them, before dissipating. Power poles were snapped, and irrigation pivots were overturned. One person was injured in a flipped vehicle.[150] | |||||||
EF0 | N of Johnson City | Stanton | KS | 37.67°N 101.75°W | 01:40 | 0.01 mi (0.016 km) | 1 yd (0.91 m) |
A storm chaser reported a tornado.[151] | |||||||
EF1 | SE of Gering | Scotts Bluff | NE | 41.81°N 103.62°W | 01:44–01:47 | 1.24 mi (2.00 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A diffuse tornado collapsed a quonset and snapped power poles.[152] | |||||||
EFU | ESE of Gering | Scotts Bluff | NE | 41.81°N 103.59°W | 01:50 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A trained spotter reported a rain-wrapped tornado.[153] | |||||||
EFU | W of Minatare | Scotts Bluff | NE | 41.82°N 103.54°W | 02:05 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A trained spotter reported a tornado.[154] | |||||||
EF0 | NE of Johnson City | Stanton | KS | 37.64°N 101.56°W | 02:09 | 0.01 mi (0.016 km) | 1 yd (0.91 m) |
A storm chaser reported a tornado.[155] | |||||||
EF0 | WNW of Ulysses | Grant | KS | 37.62°N 101.49°W | 02:12 | 4.21 mi (6.78 km) | 1 yd (0.91 m) |
The public reported a tornado.[156] | |||||||
EFU | E of Lynn | Morrill | NE | 41.81°N 102.85°W | 03:51 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A storm chaser reported a brief tornado.[157] |
June 24 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EFU | N of Lake Park (1st tornado) | Becker | MN | 46.9710°N 96.0987°W | 20:20–20:23 | 1.98 mi (3.19 km) | — |
Local broadcast media photographed a tornado;[158] no damage occurred.[119] | |||||||
EFU | NW of Borup | Norman | MN | 47.2474°N 96.5981°W | 20:25–20:30 | 2.35 mi (3.78 km) | — |
A trained spotter observed a tornado;[159] no damage occurred.[119] | |||||||
EFU | W of Waubun | Mahnomen | MN | 47.1883°N 96.0597°W | 20:54 | — | — |
A brief tornado touched down without causing damage.[119] | |||||||
EFU | S of Waubun | Mahnomen | MN | 47.1588°N 95.9469°W | 21:03 | — | — |
A brief tornado touched down for 30 seconds.[119] | |||||||
EFU | NE of Shelly | Norman, Polk | MN | 47.4946°N 96.734°W | 21:10–21:16 | 1.45 mi (2.33 km) | — |
A tornado touched down without causing damage.[119] | |||||||
EF0 | SW of Lockhart | Norman | MN | 47.4061°N 96.5992°W | 21:12–21:15 | 2.03 mi (3.27 km) | 20 yd (18 m) |
A brief tornado damaged trees in a shelterbelt.[119][160] | |||||||
EF2 | E of Mahnomen | Mahnomen | MN | 47.2542°N 95.9378°W | 21:15–21:40 | 7 mi (11 km) | 250 yd (230 m) |
An intermittent multiple vortex tornado damaged three farmsteads and two power poles. East of Mahnomen, a home had its roof completely torn off and a Quonset hut caved in. A garage shed collapsed and was shifted from its foundation. Multiple trees were snapped or uprooted.[119][161] | |||||||
EFU | NW of Lockhart | Norman | MN | 47.5498°N 96.6392°W | 21:25 | — | — |
A brief tornado touched down over open fields.[119] | |||||||
EFU | N of Lake Park (2nd tornado) | Becker | MN | 47.1293°N 96.0770°W | 21:36 | — | — |
A brief tornado touched down without causing damage.[119] | |||||||
EFU | WNW of Beltrami | Polk | MN | 47.5498°N 96.6392°W | 21:44 | — | — |
A brief tornado touched down over open fields.[119] | |||||||
EFU | NW of Beltrami (1st tornado) | Polk | MN | 47.5757°N 96.6085°W | 21:49–21:52 | 0.99 mi (1.59 km) | — |
A tornado moved through open fields.[119] | |||||||
EFU | WNW of Beltrami (2nd tornado) | Polk | MN | 47.5683°N 96.6431°W | 21:52 | — | — |
A brief tornado touched down over open fields.[119] | |||||||
EF0 | S of Maysville to ESE of Eldridge | Scott | IA | 41.6041°N 90.7113°W | 03:31–03:45 | 9.63 mi (15.50 km) | 20 yd (18 m) |
A small tornado caused sporadic tree and structural damage across its path, including at Davenport Airport.[162] | |||||||
EF0 | N of Pocahontas to SW of Rolfe | Pocahontas | IA | 42.7772°N 94.6547°W | 04:02–04:07 | 2.77 mi (4.46 km) | 80 yd (73 m) |
A tornado moved a grain bit off its foundation and rolled it into a field.[163] |
June 25 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF2 | NW of Bargersville to W of New Whiteland | Johnson | IN | 39.5692°N 86.221°W | 20:13–20:23 | 5.4 mi (8.7 km) | 400 yd (370 m) |
A strong tornado touched down northwest of Bargersville and quickly produced significant damage as it moved east. A home had bricks and part of its roof torn off and a trailer was blown into a neighboring property. The tornado then moved through the Kensington Grove subdivision and Waters Edge neighborhood where multiple homes had significant roof damage. East of there, an apartment building under construction had its entire roof shorn away with debris embedded in the ground. Thereafter, the tornado turned southeast and caused scattered tree damage before dissipating. Many trees and power poles were snapped along the path.At least 75 homes were damaged in the Bargersville area.[164][165] | |||||||
EF1 | S of Crane | Daviess, Martin | IN | 38.887°N 86.958°W | 20:21–20:30 | 3.73 mi (6.00 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
A brief tornado downed trees in the Naval Surface Warfare Center Crane Division area.[166][167] | |||||||
EF1 | NW of Oolitic | Monroe | IN | 39.0287°N 86.6745°W | 20:30–20:37 | 4.45 mi (7.16 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
One home suffered extensive roof damage. One other home and multiple outbuildings were damaged to lesser degrees. Many trees were snapped or uprooted along the tornado's path.[168] | |||||||
EF2 | ENE of Alfordsville to Rusk to W of Hillham | Martin, Dubois | IN | 38.585°N 86.8666°W | 20:34–20:46 | 9.12 mi (14.68 km) | 565 yd (517 m) |
1 death – This strong tornado impacted northwestern areas of Hoosier National Forest. Near the touchdown point, a two-car garage was destroyed, and a home had its roof partially torn off. Within Hoosier National Forest in the community of Rusk, the top floor of a two-story cabin was completely destroyed after winds from the tornado lifted the adjoining patio and caused the structure to collapse. Only one exterior wall was left standing. One person was killed, and another was injured in the home. Several outbuildings at another property were destroyed. Numerous trees were snapped or uprooted throughout its path[169][170] | |||||||
EF1 | ENE of Dover | Pope | AR | 35.4178°N 93.0723°W | 21:19–21:20 | 0.6 mi (0.97 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A brief tornado uprooted trees.[171] | |||||||
EFU | Camp Robinson | Pulaski | AR | 34.9199°N 92.3054°W | 22:37–22:38 | 0.2 mi (0.32 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A tornado was photographed over a heavily forested area of Camp Robinson, however it was non-surveyable due to widespread wind damage in the area.[172] | |||||||
EF2 | W of Cecilia | Hardin | KY | 37.682°N 86.0133°W | 02:27–02:32 | 1.17 mi (1.88 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
A brief but strong tornado caused extensive damage to a few homes and snapped or uprooted multiple trees. One home had its porch and part of its roof torn away. A carport at another home was hurled. Two vehicles were shifted, and a RV was knocked over.[173] | |||||||
EF1 | SW of Jamestown | Russell | KY | 36.9757°N 85.0861°W | 04:25–04:26 | 0.67 mi (1.08 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
A brief tornado snapped or uprooted multiple trees and caused minor roof damage to several structures.[174] | |||||||
June 26 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF0 | ENE of Martins Creek | Northampton | PA | 40.7904°N 75.1453°W | 18:58–19:04 | 3.37 mi (5.42 km) | 60 yd (55 m) |
A tornado moved through wheat fields, causing minor damage to the crops.[175] | |||||||
EF1 | Bernardsville | Somerset | NJ | 40.7109°N 74.5804°W | 19:29–19:34 | 1.38 mi (2.22 km) | 475 yd (434 m) |
A brief tornado snapped or uprooted numerous trees, some of which fell on cars and power lines. Large trees were snapped at their trunk; however, analysis determined them to not be healthy, preventing a higher damage rating.[176] | |||||||
EF1 | W of Albin | Laramie | WY | 41.411°N 104.339°W | 00:42–00:50 | 3.57 mi (5.75 km) | 1,000 yd (910 m) |
One home was damaged and an outbuilding was destroyed with debris strewn hundreds of yards away. Hay bales weighing up to 1,400 lb (640 kg) were moved up to 0.5 mi (0.80 km). Near the tornado's terminus, eight old wooden power poles were snapped.[177] | |||||||
EF1 | SW of Albin | Laramie | WY | 41.365°N 104.28°W | 00:52–01:05 | 3.55 mi (5.71 km) | 1,000 yd (910 m) |
A large tornado snapped eleven wooden power poles.[178] | |||||||
EF0 | SSE Albin | Laramie | WY | 41.316°N 104.061°W | 01:18 | 0.1 mi (0.16 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A brief tornado overturned an irrigation pivot.[179] | |||||||
EF1 | SW of Kimball | Kimball | NE | 41.194°N 103.758°W | 02:01–02:05 | 1.56 mi (2.51 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
A rope tornado tracked over largely open field south of I-80. One farmstead was impacted, with a cinderblock outbuilding destroyed and debris tossed 50 yd (46 m). A shipping container was shifted off its foundation and a 20,000 lb (9,100 kg) tandem-disk plow was moved 15 ft (4.6 m).[180] | |||||||
EFU | S of Kimball | Kimball | NE | 41.2°N 103.66°W | 02:29 | 0.5 mi (0.80 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
An NWS Employee observed a brief tornado.[181] | |||||||
June 27 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF0 | W of Hines | Harney | OR | 43.5743°N 119.3324°W | 20:00–21:00 | 2.13 mi (3.43 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A pilot reported a small tornado.[182] | |||||||
EF0 | SSE of Walla Walla, WA | Umatilla | OR | 45.9775°N 118.2793°W | 23:40–00:05 | 0.11 mi (0.18 km) | 10 yd (9.1 m) |
Photos on social media show a landspout in a farm field.[183] | |||||||
June 28 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF0 | SW of Kimball | Kimball | NE | 41.087°N 103.778°W | 00:35–00:45 | 6.8 mi (10.9 km) | 425 yd (389 m) |
A well-photographed, dusty tornado ripped shingles of a farmhouse, pushed an auger about 5 feet (1.5 m), and blew a calving hut about 20 feet (6.1 m). An electrical pole was snapped at its base. A plastic 5-US-gallon (19 L) bucket was thrown about 0.5 miles (0.80 km). Tree limbs were broken.[184] | |||||||
EFU | SSW of Kimball | Kimball | NE | 41.063°N 103.706°W | 00:47–00:49 | 0.25 mi (0.40 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
A satellite tornado to the previous tornado was videoed but remained over open farmland, thus causing no damage.[185] | |||||||
EF0 | NE of Iliff | Logan | CO | 40.78°N 103.01°W | 02:12–02:13 | 0.01 mi (0.016 km) | 25 yd (23 m) |
A tornado touched down briefly in open country. No damage was observed.[186] | |||||||
EFU | NE of Iliff | Logan | CO | 40.78°N 103.01°W | 03:13 | 0.01 mi (0.016 km) | 25 yd (23 m) |
A brief tornado occurred causing no observable damage.[187] | |||||||
June 29 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EF1 | SW of Kahoka | Clark | MO | 40.41°N 91.79°W | 15:10–15:13 | 2.21 mi (3.56 km) | 30 yd (27 m) |
This tornado touched down in the early stages of a powerful derecho. One outbuilding was severely damaged, with debris tossed up to 50 yd (46 m), and several trees were downed.[188] | |||||||
EF2 | S of Curran to SE of Chatham | Sangamon | IL | 39.7195°N 89.7715°W | 17:12–17:19 | 9.07 mi (14.60 km) | 800 yd (730 m) |
A significant tornado touched down and removed large sections of the roof of a home. The tornado then tracked southeastward into Chatham where it blew down numerous trees, tree branches and power lines. The tornado then downed several large trees and tore shingles off homes in a subdivision southeast of town before crossing I-55 and dissipating.[189] | |||||||
EF1 | Northern Lincoln to SSW of Lawndale | Logan | IL | 40.167°N 89.3708°W | 17:26–17:30 | 4.42 mi (7.11 km) | 800 yd (730 m) |
A tornado began in northern Lincoln at Kickapoo Creek Park. It damaged several trees in the park before moving into open fields and downing large electrical poles.[190] | |||||||
EFU | NW of Palmer | Christian | IL | 39.5177°N 89.4954°W | 17:27–17:28 | 0.76 mi (1.22 km) | 40 yd (37 m) |
Sentinel-2 satellite imagery showed a tornado touched down and traveled through farm fields only damaging crops.[191] | |||||||
EF1 | N of Kincaid | Christian | IL | 39.6141°N 89.4251°W | 17:29–17:32 | 3.45 mi (5.55 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
A metal farm building was demolished, and trees were damaged.[192] | |||||||
EF1 | S of Mt. Auburn | Christian | IL | 39.7486°N 89.2669°W | 17:33–17:34 | 0.98 mi (1.58 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
Sentinel-2 satellite imagery showed a tornado damaged multiple trees.[193] | |||||||
EF1 | SW of Waynesville to Wapella | Logan, DeWitt | IL | 40.2107°N 89.1755°W | 17:35–17:46 | 14.18 mi (22.82 km) | 800 yd (730 m) |
A tornado caused a farm building to collapse, produced extensive tree damage, and inflicted some damage to homes in Wapella.[194][195] | |||||||
EF1 | NE of Taylorville to NW of Assumption | Christian | IL | 40.2107°N 89.1755°W | 17:38–17:47 | 10.36 mi (16.67 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
Trees and a house were damaged.[196] | |||||||
June 30 event
EF# | Location | County / Parish | State | Start Coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max width |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EFU | WNW of Hartsel | Park | CO | 39.04°N 105.9°W | 15:00–15:01 | 0.01 mi (0.016 km) | 25 yd (23 m) |
A tornado touched down briefly in open country. No damage was observed.[197] | |||||||
EFU | SW of Byers | Elbert | CO | 39.55°N 104.31°W | 17:40–17:43 | 0.01 mi (0.016 km) | 25 yd (23 m) |
A brief tornado occurred over open fields.[198] | |||||||
EFU | NNW of Seibert | Kit Carson | CO | 39.3948°N 102.9241°W | 19:46–19:47 | 0.12 mi (0.19 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
Several storm chasers filmed a brief tornado occurring.[199] | |||||||
EFU | NNW of Stratton | Kit Carson | CO | 39.4099°N 102.6614°W | 20:19–20:22 | 0.06 mi (0.097 km) | 75 yd (69 m) |
A brief tornado was reported causing no damage.[200] | |||||||
EFU | SE of Model | Las Animas | CO | 37.27°N 104.15°W | 20:45–20:48 | 2.08 mi (3.35 km) | 10 yd (9.1 m) |
A brief tornado was observed.[201] | |||||||
EF0 | W of Cripple Creek | Park | CO | 38.74°N 105.33°W | 23:30–23:49 | 0.88 mi (1.42 km) | 25 yd (23 m) |
Trees were uprooted, and the roof of a house was damaged.[202] | |||||||
See also
Notes
- All dates are based on the local time zone where the tornado touched down; however, all times are in Coordinated Universal Time for consistency.
References
- "U.S. Tornadoes". National Centers for Environmental Information. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved June 1, 2023.
- Ian Livingston (June 3, 2015). "Here's where tornadoes typically form in June across the United States". U.S. Tornadoes. Retrieved June 2, 2023.
- "Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- "Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- "Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- "Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- "Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- "Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- "Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- "DAT". apps.dat.noaa.gov. Retrieved June 6, 2023.
- "DAT". apps.dat.noaa.gov. Retrieved June 6, 2023.
- "DAT". apps.dat.noaa.gov. Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- "Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- "Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- "Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- "Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- "Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- "Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- "Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- "Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- "Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- "Storm Events Database". Retrieved September 18, 2023.
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