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  1. Storm Prediction Center. This is a map and list of tornadoes since 1950 which the National Weather Service has rated F5 (before 2007) or EF5 (equivalent, 2007 onward, the most intense damage category on the Fujita and Enhanced Fujita damage scales. The tornadoes are numbered in the order they happened since 1950; so the numbers run from the ...

  2. Apr 10, 2020 · 1. The Tri-State Tornado of March 25, 1925. The "single" deadliest tornado in U.S. history was the famous Tri-State Tornado of March 25, 1925. At least 695 people died in Missouri,...

  3. Enhanced Fujita scale. The National Weather Service ’s arrow showing the EF scale. This includes a description word for each level of the scale. The Enhanced Fujita scale (abbreviated as EF-Scale) rates tornado intensity based on the severity of the damage they cause.

  4. Apr 9, 2020 · The original Fujita Tornado Damage Scale (or F-scale) had an upper-limit estimate of 318 mph for a three-second gust within a F5 tornado, but the EF scale does not place a maximum wind value on...

  5. Mar 29, 2018 · May 18, 2019. At a Glance. Very few tornadoes have been given the most violent EF5/F5 rating since 1950. The last EF5 tornado in the U.S. was almost six years ago in Moore, Oklahoma. It's...

  6. F5 tornadoes were estimated to have had maximum winds between 261-318 mph (420–512 kilometers per hour). [9] [note 3] F5 damage in Bridge Creek, Oklahoma, from the May 3, 1999, tornado. Following two particularly devastating tornadoes in 1997 and 1999, engineers questioned the reliability of the Fujita scale.

  7. May 25, 2021 · As of Tuesday, May 25, 2021, it had been eight years and five days since the nation last saw a tornado rated EF5 by the National Weather Service. This broke a record-long quiet spell in a National Weather Service database going back to 1950, taking into account F5 tornadoes on the original Fujita-Pearson Scale as well as EF5s on the Enhanced ...

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