Tornado outbreak of October 20–22, 2019
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A significant severe weather event impacted the South Central United States between October 20–22, 2019. Forecasters first identified the threat on October 16 as a large upper-level trough was expected to combine with an unstable atmosphere across Texas, Oklahoma, and Arkansas particularly. On the evening of October 20, discrete supercell thunderstorms developed across the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, contributing to several tornadoes. One of those tornadoes caused EF3 damage in the Dallas suburbs, becoming the costliest tornado event in Texas history, at $1.55 billion. A later squall line contributed to additional tornadoes and a widespread swath of damaging winds as the system tracked eastward.
Quick Facts Type, Duration ...
Type | Tornado outbreak |
---|---|
Duration | October 20, 2019 - October 22, 2019 |
Highest winds |
|
Tornadoes confirmed | 36 |
Max. rating1 | EF3 tornado |
Duration of tornado outbreak2 | 24 hours |
Largest hail | 2.75 in (70 mm) (Milburn and Prague, Oklahoma) |
Fatalities | 0 fatalities (+2 non-tornadic),[1] 4 injuries[2] |
Damage | $2 billion (2019 USD) [3] |
Areas affected | South Central United States, Southeastern United States |
Part of the tornado outbreaks of 2019 1Most severe tornado damage; see Enhanced Fujita scale 2Time from first tornado to last tornado |
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