Tornado outbreak of July 28–29, 2021
Tornado outbreak in the Northern United States / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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An unusually prolific summer tornado outbreak affected parts of the Northern United States from the late evening and overnight hours of July 28 into the early morning hours of July 29. It started with a powerful line of severe thunderstorms that produced widespread damaging straight-line winds and multiple embedded weak tornadoes across the state of Wisconsin. During the afternoon and evening of July 29, numerous tornadic supercells developed across portions of the Ohio Valley and Mid-Atlantic regions, producing many tornadoes. A few of the tornadoes were strong and damaging, including an EF3 tornado that caused severe damage in the Philadelphia suburbs of Trevose and Bensalem.
Type | Tornado outbreak |
---|---|
Duration | July 28–29, 2021 |
Highest winds |
|
Tornadoes confirmed | 46 |
Max. rating1 | EF3 tornado |
Duration of tornado outbreak2 | 23 hours, 33 minutes |
Largest hail | Unknown |
Fatalities | 0 (+1 non-tornadic), 13 injuries |
Damage | $315 million (2021 USD) |
Areas affected | Great Lakes, Ohio Valley, and Mid-Atlantic, U.S. |
Part of the tornado outbreaks of 2021 1Most severe tornado damage; see Enhanced Fujita scale 2Time from first tornado to last tornado |
A motorist was killed after driving into a tree felled by straight line-winds near Ripon, Wisconsin, though no tornado-related fatalities occurred. The tornado outbreak was the largest for southeast Pennsylvania and New Jersey on record.[1]