
A cold front will cross the Great Lakes and Northeast U.S. through Monday with gusty winds and areas of rain showers. A strong atmospheric river is expected to move into the Pacific Northwest by midweek bringing a threat for moderate to heavy rainfall, gusty winds, and mountain snows for parts of Washington, Oregon, northern California, and the Sierra Nevada. Read More >
The data for these pages are decoded from the historical tornado data archive at the Storm Prediction Center. The only modifications to this data were supplemental location information from Storm Data and changes to information where a coding error was detected in the archive data files when compared to Storm Data, which is the official record of severe weather events, and is described in NOAA Tech Memo NWS SR-209 (Speheger, D., 2001: "Corrections to the Historic Tornado Database"). Tornado data before 1950 (where available) are from records kept at the National Weather Service Forecast Office in Norman, OK. The data can be accessed by using the drop-down menus or map above.
The tables contain the following information:
Note about tornadoes before 1950. Records from the U.S. Weather Bureau were used to include western north Texas tornadoes before 1950. However, this pre-1950 list is known to be incomplete. This listing is not meant to document all probable tornadoes in the state (or territories) before 1950 or compete with more complete works such as "Significant Tornadoes 1680-1991" by Grazulis, but to list the tornadoes recorded by the USWB.