Tornado outbreak of March 3, 2019 explained

Rsi:1.374
Tornado outbreak of March 3, 2019
Tornadoes:42
Fujitascale:EF4
Enhanced:yes
Tornado Duration:6 hours, 30 minutes
Maximum Snow:27.5inches in Mount Audubon, Colorado on March 2–3[1]
Total Fatalities:23 deaths, 103 injuries
Damages:$190 million (2019 USD)[2]
Partof:the tornado outbreaks of 2019

A significant and deadly severe weather event that affected the Southeastern United States on March 3, 2019. Over the course of 6 hours, a total of 42 tornadoes touched down across portions of Alabama, Georgia, Florida, and South Carolina. The strongest of these was an EF4 tornado that devastated rural communities from Beauregard, Alabama, through Smiths Station, Alabama to Talbotton, Georgia, killing 23 people and injuring at least 100 others. Its death toll represented more than twice the number of tornado deaths in the United States in 2018 as well as the deadliest single tornado in the country since the 2013 Moore EF5 tornado. An EF3 tornado also destroyed residences to the east of Tallahassee in Leon County, Florida, and was only the second tornado of that strength in the county since 1945. Several other strong tornadoes occurred across the region throughout the evening of March 3 and caused significant damage. A large number of EF0 and EF1 tornadoes also touched down.

Meteorological synopsis

On February 28, the Storm Prediction Center (SPC) issued a day four risk for severe thunderstorms across a broad region of the Southeast United States stretching from northern Louisiana through northwestern Georgia.[3] A broad slight risk was introduced the following day,[4] and a more narrow enhanced risk was raised across portions of southeastern Alabama and southwestern Georgia later on March 2 where the threat for tornadoes, some potentially strong, appeared most likely.[5]

The severe weather prediction for March 3 came to fruition that morning as a broad mid-level cyclone in the northern jet stream pushed eastward over northern Ontario and James Bay. A series of shortwave troughs rotated around the southern semicircle of this low-pressure system, with an especially well-defined shortwave progressing from the South Central United States eastward across the Appalachian Mountains and into the Atlantic Ocean. This feature led to the formation of a surface low over northern Mississippi and Alabama, aiding in the northern transport of rich and deep moisture originating from the Gulf of Mexico. Strong southwesterly low-level winds coupled with strong forcing for ascent along a trailing cold front led to the formation of a squall line stretching from the Carolinas down into portions of the Deep South. Ahead of this line, the combination of mid-level Convective Available Potential Energy of 500–1,200 J/kg, a low-level jet of 50–70 kn, and effective storm-relative helicity of 250–400 J/kg resulted in a highly unstable atmosphere that was conducive to the formation of strong tornadoes. The lack of strong convective inhibition, coupled with weak forcing, favored the formation of numerous discrete supercell thunderstorms across the Florida Panhandle, southeastern Alabama, much of central Georgia, and into South Carolina.[6] Throughout the afternoon, numerous supercell thunderstorms that formed ahead of the squall line produced several significant and damaging tornadoes, including the long-tracked violent EF4 tornado that struck Beauregard and Smiths Station, Alabama as well as Talbotton, Georgia. As the squall line moved eastward, embedded circulations and semi-discrete structures within the line produced additional strong tornadoes before tornadic activity waned with eastward progression overnight.[7]

Confirmed tornadoes

March 3 event

EF#! scope="col" style="width:7%; text-align:center;" class="unsortable"
LocationCounty / ParishStateStart Coord.Time (UTC)Path lengthMax widthSummary
bgcolor= EF1S of ChatomWashingtonAL18:55–18:563.18abbr=onNaNabbr=on300abbr=onNaNabbr=onTrees were damaged and some were snapped in the vicinity of SR 17.[8] In November 2023, this tornado was reanalyzed and had its track extended significantly based on a narrow swath of tree damage noted on high-resolution Planet satellite imagery. The tornado occurred primarily in densely forested areas largely inaccessible to the survey team. Path length increased from 0.17abbr=onNaNabbr=on to 3.18abbr=onNaNabbr=on.[9]
bgcolor= EF0ENE of MulberryAutaugaAL19:190.62abbr=onNaNabbr=on70abbr=onNaNabbr=onTree limbs were broken and some trees were uprooted.[10]
bgcolor= EF1SW of McIntoshWashingtonAL19:37–19:422.6abbr=onNaNabbr=on100abbr=onNaNabbr=onAn addition to a church was heavily damaged. Trees were downed, and a few other structures in the area sustained minor damage.
bgcolor= EF4W of Beauregard, AL to ENE of Talbotton, GAMacon (AL), Lee (AL), Muscogee (GA), Harris (GA), Talbot (GA)AL, GA20:00–21:1668.73abbr=onNaNabbr=on1600abbr=onNaNabbr=on23 deaths – See article on this tornado – A total of 90 people were injured.[11] [12]
bgcolor= EF2N of Fort ValleyCrawford, PeachGA20:15–20:226.7abbr=onNaNabbr=on420abbr=onNaNabbr=onA mobile home was flipped and destroyed, injuring one woman inside. A vehicle was flipped and rolled, a house had its roof completely removed and sustained partial exterior wall collapse, and a neighboring home suffered roof damage from flying debris. Numerous trees were snapped or uprooted, pecan farming equipment was overturned, and a farming shed was destroyed.[13]
bgcolor= EF2S of Tuskegee to E of BeauregardMacon, LeeAL20:27–20:5729.07abbr=onNaNabbr=on1300abbr=onNaNabbr=onA tornado formed from an embedded rotation within the squall that followed behind the supercell that spawned the initial Lee County EF4. At some points, the path of this tornado passed as close as 0.4 miles away from the original EF4 path. Many thousands of trees were damaged, including several large groves of trees that were completely mowed down. A few outbuildings were destroyed, manufactured homes sustained significant damage, several homes suffered varying degrees of roof damage, and a farm irrigation system was damaged. A brick church sustained shingle damage, and a cinder block building at a cemetery had its roof blown off. Another church lost roughly half of its roof. Two mobile homes were rolled over near the end of the tornado's path, resulting in one injury.[14]
bgcolor= EF1NW of HonoravilleButler, CrenshawAL20:34–20:3425.03abbr=onNaNabbr=on50abbr=onNaNabbr=onIn Butler County, an outbuilding was damaged, the roof was blown off a single-story brick home, and numerous trees were snapped or uprooted.[15] In Crenshaw county, numerous trees were uprooted, including one that fell onto a mobile home. A nearby outbuilding was damaged. This tornado was originally the first of two in close proximity, however, in November 2023, reanalysis discovered that it was one continuous tornado path from Butler into Crenshaw county. This was discovered using Planet satellite imagery. The starting point of the tornado was also adjusted slightly west of the initial point.
bgcolor= EF0MaconBibbGA20:36–20:381.1abbr=onNaNabbr=on150abbr=onNaNabbr=onA weak tornado impacted downtown Macon, causing minor roof, shingle, and window damage to several buildings. Three transformers were blown, signs were downed, a large flag pole was bent at a right angle about 3feet from its base, and several vehicles had their windows blown out. An anemometer recorded a peak gust of 66mph before it broke. Large tables were tossed.
bgcolor= EF1S of HuberTwiggsGA20:42–20:441.2abbr=onNaNabbr=on300abbr=onNaNabbr=onA number of large trees were snapped or uprooted. One tree was downed onto a house.
bgcolor= EF0E of WorkmoreTelfairGA21:05–21:094.1abbr=onNaNabbr=on150abbr=onNaNabbr=onThe porch to a home was ripped from its concrete footings and tossed over 100yd. Minor roof damage occurred to the home and a wooden power pole adjacent to the structure was snapped. Around a dozen trees were downed.
bgcolor= EF0ENE of JacksonvilleTelfairGA21:090.4abbr=onNaNabbr=on100abbr=onNaNabbr=onA chicken house was lifted and tossed 50feet into a nearby shed. Several trees were snapped.
bgcolor= EF0SSW of InvernessBullockAL21:150.42abbr=onNaNabbr=on50abbr=onNaNabbr=onSeveral trees snapped or uprooted.[16]
bgcolor= EF1E of ToomsboroWilkinsonGA21:18–21:203.3abbr=onNaNabbr=on630abbr=onNaNabbr=onNumerous trees were snapped or uprooted and some roof damage occurred to structures at a mine site. The tornado continued into an inaccessible woodland area.
bgcolor= EF0S of RupertTaylorGA21:18–21:246.6abbr=onNaNabbr=on200abbr=onNaNabbr=onSporadic tree damage was observed.
bgcolor= EF1Southern Pine MountainHarrisGA21:19–21:287.5abbr=onNaNabbr=on900abbr=onNaNabbr=onHundreds of trees were downed, several of which fell on houses in the southern part of Pine Mountain. In addition, an apartment building had one of its second floor rooms destroyed by a fallen tree.
bgcolor= EF1S of OconeeWashingtonGA21:24–21:250.5abbr=onNaNabbr=on200abbr=onNaNabbr=onSections of shingles were removed from a house and the backyard shed on the property was flipped and heavily damaged. A number of trees were downed and snapped.
bgcolor= EF1SW of TennilleWashingtonGA21:36–21:381.5abbr=onNaNabbr=on290abbr=onNaNabbr=onA large number of trees were snapped or uprooted.
bgcolor= EF0NW of PerryMacon, PeachGA21:43–21:516.4abbr=onNaNabbr=on300abbr=onNaNabbr=onNumerous trees were snapped, metal was peeled from one outbuilding, and a mobile home suffered damage to its skirting and roof. Another outbuilding had one of its three south-facing doors blown off and thrown onto a nearby building, while a 30feet wooden fence was snapped at its posts.
bgcolor= EF2NW of EufaulaBarbourAL21:45–21:556.68abbr=onNaNabbr=on700abbr=onNaNabbr=onHundreds of trees were severely damaged, including a large area of trees that was completely mowed down. A large wooden double power pole was knocked down as well.[17]
bgcolor= EF1S of DavisboroWashingtonGA21:550.2abbr=onNaNabbr=on85abbr=onNaNabbr=onA farm outbuilding and an old concrete silo were damaged. The silo was collapsed with its concrete debris scattering and downing nearby power lines.
bgcolor= EF2N of Eufaula, AL to SW of Weston, GABarbour (AL), Quitman (GA), Stewart (GA), Webster (GA)AL, GA21:58–22:3231abbr=onNaNabbr=on860abbr=onNaNabbr=onA rain-wrapped, high-end EF2 tornado destroyed a fire station north of Eufaula, along with several metal-framed industrial buildings and airplane hangars at and around Weedon Field. Multiple airplanes were damaged or destroyed, and numerous trees were snapped or uprooted. A few homes and mobile homes in the area were damaged as well. The tornado continued into Georgia, producing moderate tree damage in Quitman County before continuing into Stewart County. There, multiple large metal-framed barns were destroyed, and several large pieces of farming equipment were moved. A single-family home had its roof ripped off and most exterior walls collapsed as well. Several campers were flipped over and destroyed, and hundreds of trees were snapped or uprooted. The tornado continued into Webster County, snapping a few tree branches and flipping a portion of a large irrigation system before dissipating.
bgcolor= EF0SW of DeFuniak SpringsWaltonFL22:28–22:4112.12abbr=onNaNabbr=on400abbr=onNaNabbr=onA weak tornado touched down on Eglin Air Force Base property and moved northeast, producing scattered tree damage.[18]
bgcolor= EF0E of ShortervilleHenry (AL), Clay (GA)AL, GA22:39–22:529.59abbr=onNaNabbr=on75abbr=onNaNabbr=onA weak tornado began in Henry County, Alabama, uprooting several trees. It continued into Clay County in Georgia where it removed from roofing material from a roadway, downed an irrigation system, and uprooted additional trees.
bgcolor= EF2Western EvansColumbiaGA22:441.52abbr=onNaNabbr=on100abbr=onNaNabbr=onThis tornado impacted the western part of Evans, where numerous homes sustained minor to moderate damage. One well-built brick home had a large portion of its roof torn off, and vehicles were damaged by flying debris. Sheds and fences were destroyed, and numerous trees were snapped or uprooted.[19]
bgcolor= EF1S of SlocombGenevaAL22:51–22:585.14abbr=onNaNabbr=on300abbr=onNaNabbr=onA single-family home had its entire garage roof and a portion of its main roof ripped off. A manufactured house immediately behind that structure was lifted off its anchor points and rotated 10– from its original location. Other single-family homes, manufactured homes, and a barn suffered minor to moderate damage. Larger trees were snapped. One person was injured.
bgcolor= EF2SE of Clarks HillEdgefieldSC22:535.05abbr=onNaNabbr=on200abbr=onNaNabbr=onNumerous large trees were snapped or uprooted in the Morgana community, some of which landed on homes and vehicles. Power poles were snapped, and several homes and a gas station sustained damage as well. At least four people were injured.
bgcolor= EF0W of BranchvilleOrangeburgSC23:030.16abbr=onNaNabbr=on25abbr=onNaNabbr=onMultiple trees were uprooted and snapped.[20]
bgcolor= EF1E of Sunny HillsWashington, JacksonFL23:33–23:385.27abbr=onNaNabbr=on300abbr=onNaNabbr=onIn Washington County, several homes had tin roofing material stripped off, with the most severe case involving a metal canopy being blown 75feet. Similar damage occurred to homes in Jackson County. Trees were snapped and uprooted throughout the tornado's path, and outbuildings were damaged or destroyed. Wooden projectiles were speared into the ground, and a trampoline and a doghouse were blown away as well.
bgcolor= EF1Red BankLexingtonSC23:5310.92abbr=onNaNabbr=on100abbr=onNaNabbr=onNumerous trees were snapped and uprooted, support columns at a church were damaged, and roof and property damage occurred to several homes.
bgcolor= EF1SE of RiceboroLibertyGA23:587.85abbr=onNaNabbr=on350abbr=onNaNabbr=onDebris was tossed onto I-95, where a motorcyclist hit the debris and suffered injuries. A camper trailer was flipped and rolled about 20–, and a single-family home sustained minor shingle damage.[21]
bgcolor= EF1LexingtonLexingtonSC00:021.93abbr=onNaNabbr=on50abbr=onNaNabbr=onAn awning at a gas station was damaged, a seafood restaurant had its porch roof blown off, and eight recreational vehicles were overturned at a business, some of which were moved nearly 50yd. Two large trailers were overturned at another business, and several homes sustained minor roof damage. Numerous trees were snapped or uprooted.
bgcolor= EF1S of BoykinMillerGA00:02–00:104.26abbr=onNaNabbr=on150abbr=onNaNabbr=onTwo homes were blown off their cinder block foundations and destroyed, including one that was pushed 60feet; the occupant to that house sustained severe injuries. A third house saw a corner of its roof peeled off and a portion of its wall blown in. Two center pivot irrigation systems were overturned. Several trees were snapped or uprooted.
bgcolor= EF1ColumbiaRichlandSC00:131.46abbr=onNaNabbr=on150abbr=onNaNabbr=onNumerous trees were snapped or uprooted, many of which fell on homes and vehicles and inflicted severe damage.
bgcolor= EF1ENE of BethanyDecaturGA00:18–00:244.59abbr=onNaNabbr=on150abbr=onNaNabbr=onLarge trees were snapped, one of which fell on a home.
bgcolor= EF1Fort JacksonRichlandSC00:330.6abbr=onNaNabbr=on200abbr=onNaNabbr=onMultiple trees were snapped and uprooted.[22]
bgcolor= EF1S of GreensboroGadsdenFL00:41–00:452.12abbr=onNaNabbr=on275abbr=onNaNabbr=onA single-wide mobile home was flipped, a few small utility poles were snapped, and a few homes suffered roof damage either from the tornado itself or fallen trees.
bgcolor= EF1NE of OmegaTiftGA00:49–00:520.72abbr=onNaNabbr=on180abbr=onNaNabbr=onTrees were snapped and uprooted. A large garage had an exterior wall bowed outward and sustained significant shingle damage. A large trailer filled with air conditioning units, estimated to weigh about 700lbs, was moved about 3feet. The metal roof of the building harboring the trailer and other vehicles were partially uplifted.
bgcolor= EF2CairoGradyGA00:54–01:002.69abbr=onNaNabbr=on800abbr=onNaNabbr=onThis strong tornado caused significant damage in Cairo. Numerous trees in town were snapped or uprooted, some of which landed on structures. Many homes were damaged, including several that sustained roof and exterior wall loss. Power lines were downed, garages were destroyed, and several businesses sustained heavy damage as well. A mesonet station in town recorded a peak gust of 102mph as the tornado struck. Two people were injured.
bgcolor= EF0NW of Sopchoppy to SSW of BethelWakullaFL01:03–01:2618.41abbr=onNaNabbr=on300abbr=onNaNabbr=onA weak but long-tracked tornado began in the Apalachicola National Forest, damaging trees. A small shed-sized metal canopy was flipped, and a commercial sign suffered some minor damage too.
bgcolor= EF3E of Tallahassee to N of LloydLeon, JeffersonFL01:18–01:256.5abbr=onNaNabbr=on700abbr=onNaNabbr=onA significant tornado began in eastern Leon County, destroying an outbuilding and snapping numerous trees. The most intense damage was inflicted to two well-built frame homes that were destroyed and left with only a few walls standing. Nearby cars were lofted and displaced, and multiple power poles were snapped. Several other homes sustained major structural damage as well. In western Jefferson County, numerous trees were snapped. Two people were injured. This is only the second EF3 or stronger tornado in Leon County based on reliable records going back to 1945.
bgcolor= EF0NNE of St. MarksWakullaFL01:42–01:460.66abbr=onNaNabbr=on50abbr=onNaNabbr=onSome trees were blown down and a debris ball was visible on radar.[23]

Beauregard–Smiths Station, Alabama/Talbotton, Georgia

Beauregard–Smiths Station, Alabama/Talbotton, Georgia
Formed:2:00 p.m. CST, March 3, 2019
Duration:76 minutes
Dissipated:4:16 p.m. EST, March 3, 2019
Basin:atl
Winds:170mph
Fujita-Scale:EF4
Deaths:23
Injuries:97
Damages:>$500,000 (2019 USD) (Damage estimates only covers tornado while in Georgia.)

See main article: 2019 Beauregard tornado. This violent, deadly, and long-tracked wedge tornado touched down in eastern Macon County, Alabama, just northeast of US 80 (SR 8) and near the Lee County line. Initially a weak tornado, it snapped tree limbs and uprooted trees at EF0 to EF1 intensity as it moved east northeastward. Crossing into Lee County, EF1 damage was observed as additional trees were downed and a poorly constructed church had its roof blown off and sustained collapse of two unreinforced cinder block exterior walls. Widening into a large wedge tornado, it intensified to EF2 strength as it crossed County Road 11, where numerous large trees were snapped and denuded. A house and two storage sheds had sheet metal peeled off and scattered into a treeline. The tornado continued to intensify dramatically as it crossed Cave Mill Road and County Road 39, reaching its peak intensity of low-end EF4 and producing widespread, devastating damage as it impacted the southern part of Beauregard. A massive swath of large trees in this area was completely mowed down and debarked, and numerous manufactured homes were thrown and obliterated, with debris scattered in all directions and the metal frames of several of these homes being twisted around trees or never recovered. The most intense damage was inflicted to a well-built, anchor-bolted brick home that was leveled with a portion of the slab foundation swept clean of debris. Several block-foundation frame homes were leveled or swept completely away in this area, and windrowing of debris was noted. Multiple vehicles were lofted through the air and mangled beyond recognition, including one car that was wrapped around a tree. A large semi-truck was flipped over and wrapped around the base of a tree as well, a high-tension power line tower was toppled, and a few homes farther away from the center of the damage path had their roofs ripped off.

Continuing to the east-northeast, the tornado weakened to EF3 strength as it crossed SR 51 and struck the small neighboring community of Dupree. Many additional manufactured homes were completely destroyed with debris strewn downwind, numerous trees were snapped and debarked, and frame homes sustained total roof and exterior wall loss in this area. The tornado moved slightly north of due east, crossing Lee County Road 100 and Lee County Road 166, snapping numerous trees as it weakened further to high-end EF2 strength. A well-anchored manufactured home in this area was ripped from its foundation and blown 100feet but remained mostly intact. A frame home had major roof damage, windows blown out, and a few exterior walls ripped off. Crossing County Road 165 and County Road 40, high-end EF2 damage continued as a house lost its roof and exterior walls, another home had much of its roof torn off, several manufactured homes were damaged or destroyed, and many trees were snapped. Farther along the path, low-end EF2 damage was observed to the west of SR 169, where numerous trees were snapped and a few structures at the periphery of the damage path sustained minor impacts. Further weakening occurred as the tornado crossed and continued to the east of SR 169, downing trees at EF1 intensity.[24]

The tornado began to strengthen again just east-northeast of this location, reaching EF2 intensity as it crossed County Road 245. A house lost much of its roof, and another home sustained less severe damage in this area as well. The tornado then crossed County Road 179 and entered the town of Smiths Station at high-end EF2 strength. In Smiths Station, multiple small and poorly constructed frame homes lost their roofs and exterior walls, a bar and music venue sustained major structural damage, a gas station sustained moderate damage, and numerous trees were downed. A cell tower was toppled to the ground, blocking US 280/431 in both directions for many hours, and a billboard sign was damaged, part of which was reportedly found roughly 20abbr=onNaNabbr=on away in Georgia near Hamilton. East of town, EF2 damage continued as two metal transmission towers were knocked down, homes were damaged, and many large trees were snapped and/or uprooted, including several that landed on single-family homes and other structures and caused major damage.

Crossing the Chattahoochee River, the tornado exited Alabama and entered Muscogee County, Georgia, moving through sparsely populated areas and downing numerous trees at EF1 strength before crossing I-185 (SR 411). As the tornado strengthened and passed between Barin and Fortson, a small area of low-end EF3 damage was noted as a large cell tower was toppled over and mangled along US 27 (SR 1). Several one inch in diameter metal guide wires were snapped at this location, and a nearby swath of trees was flattened to the ground. Numerous additional trees were downed at EF1 strength as the tornado moved into Harris County and passed south of Ellerslie. Multiple homes sustained mostly shingle and carport damage in this area, though one home sustained considerable damage to its attic and second floor. Paralleling and eventually crossing SR 315, the tornado reached EF2 strength as countless trees were snapped or uprooted, and a house sustained major damage to its second floor. Further intensification occurred as the tornado entered Talbot County and again reached low-end EF3 intensity as it struck the rural community of Baughville, where the Humble Zion Church was destroyed. The church was completely flattened, but was not anchored to its foundation. Another church in this area was also destroyed, along with a mobile home. A two-story frame home also sustained severe damage.

The tornado briefly weakened to high-end EF1 strength past Baughville, downing many trees in heavily forested areas. Once again, regaining low-end EF3 strength, the tornado proceeded to strike the north side of Talbotton, causing major damage in town. Numerous manufactured homes were obliterated, with debris being scattered up to a quarter mile away through nearby woods. Multiple other manufactured homes were badly damaged. Several frame homes also sustained severe damage, including one that was shifted 10feet off of its foundation, and another that had its second floor removed. Vehicles were piled atop each other and damaged by flying debris, and an unanchored brick duplex was swept from its foundation and leveled, leaving only the foundation slab and a pile of debris behind. Continuing to the east-northeast past Talbotton, a manufactured home was rolled and destroyed. Mostly EF1 damage was observed beyond this point, though a final area of EF2 tree damage occurred in a small valley near the concurrent US 80 and SR 540. Hundreds of trees were snapped off at the base in this area before the tornado began to rapidly weaken and shrink in size. A few more trees were snapped near the intersection of George Smith Rd and Carl Mathis Rd before the tornado dissipated.[25]

There were 23 people killed by this violent tornado, with all of the fatalities occurring in Lee County, Alabama; 90 others were injured, some critically. The tornado was on the ground for 68.73abbr=onNaNabbr=on and reached a peak width of 1600abbr=onNaNabbr=on.[26] This was the first violent (EF4 or EF5) tornado in the United States since April 29, 2017 and the deadliest since the 2013 Moore tornado.[27] It was also the first violent tornado in Lee County since 1875 and the first deadly tornado to strike Lee County since 1953.[28] [29]

Non-tornadic impacts

The cold section of the tornado outbreak produced a snowstorm across much of the United States. In Colorado, 16inches of snow fell at Estes Park and 3.7inches fell at Denver International Airport. 13inches of snow fell in Squaw Valley, California. As the storm tracked eastward, snow was wreaking havoc on parts of the Four Corner States and the Midwest, closing roads and cancelling over 700 flights.[30] Shaping up to be much more intense than the first storm for the US Northeast, The National Weather Service issued winter storm warnings from West Virginia to Maine. Closer to the Atlantic coast a mix of rain and snow affected major cities such as Baltimore, Philadelphia, and New York City, although in Boston, snowfall totals were over a foot even along the ocean.[31] Many schools in the Philadelphia metropolitan area had delayed openings, with Amtrak modifying certain trains.[32] This led to a snow day in New York City on March 4,[33] where a total observed snowfall was 5inches in Central Park.[34] A plane in Maine slid off a runway due to the ice, injuring 5 people.[35] Almost 60,000 customers in the Northeast lost power.[36] The storm also affected Atlantic Canada, although the track of the low was much closer to the shoreline than the previous storm, resulting in mixed precipitation for Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, with heftier snowfall totals in New Brunswick and Newfoundland.[37] 24cm (09inches) of snow fell in Moncton and winds gusted to 170km/h in Wreckhouse.[38]

Aftermath

Twenty-three deaths occurred as a result of a single tornado that moved through Lee County, Alabama.[39] A majority of the deaths occurred in and around the small Alabama town of Beauregard.[40] Four of the dead were children.[41] Ten of the victims were from one family.[42] Sixty patients were received at the East Alabama Medical Center; however, only four remained hospitalized on March 4.[43] Many people were initially reported as missing.[44] Drones with heat-seeking devices were utilized in the search effort for survivors while ground crews had to wait for morning light on March 4. In a later report on March 6, all tornado victims in Alabama have been accounted for.[45]

See also

External links

Outbreak summaries from regional National Weather Service offices:

Notes and References

  1. https://www.denverpost.com/2019/03/02/colorado-snow-totals-march-2/ Colorado snow totals for March 2-3, 2019
  2. Web site: Global Catastrophe Recap - March 2019 . ReliefWeb . AON . April 22, 2022.
  3. Web site: Mark Darrow . Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook Issued on Feb 28, 2019 . Storm Prediction Center . February 28, 2019 . March 6, 2019 . Norman, Oklahoma.
  4. Web site: Steve Goss . Mar 1, 2019 0830 UTC Day 3 Severe Thunderstorm Outlook. Storm Prediction Center . March 1, 2019 . March 3, 2019 . Norman, Oklahoma.
  5. Web site: Chris Broyles . Mar 2, 2019 1730 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook . Storm Prediction Center . March 2, 2019 . March 3, 2019 . Norman, Oklahoma.
  6. Web site: Roger Edwards . Elizabeth Leitman . Mar 3, 2019 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook . Storm Prediction Center . March 3, 2019 . March 3, 2019 . Norman, Oklahoma.
  7. Web site: SPC Storm Reports for 03/03/19 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20190305051137/https://www.spc.noaa.gov/climo/reports/ . March 5, 2019 . March 5, 2019 . March 3, 2019 . live.
  8. Web site: NWS Mobile, Alabama . NWS Damage Survey For March 3, 2019 Washington County Tornado Events . Iowa Environmental Mesonet . Iowa State University . March 4, 2019 . Mobile, Alabama . March 4, 2019.
  9. National Weather Service in Mobile, Alabama. Local Tornado Reanalysis Project. weather.gov. 2024. January 25, 2024.
  10. National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Birmingham, Alabama. County Road 33 EF-0 Tornado (Autauga County). National Weather Service. March 5, 2019. March 5, 2019.
  11. Web site: National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Birmingham, Alabama. Beauregard-Smiths Station EF-4 Tornado (Macon/Lee Counties) March 3, 2019. National Weather Service. March 5, 2019. March 5, 2019. Birmingham, Alabama.
  12. National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Atlanta, Georgia. Update #3 From NWS Damage Surveys Including the Long-Track Tornado which Traversed from Macon and Lee Counties in Alabama Through Muscogee, Harris and Talbotton Counties in Georgia. Iowa Environmental Mesonet. March 5, 2019. March 5, 2019.
  13. National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Atlanta, Georgia. NWS Preliminary Damage Assessment Report for the March 3 2019 Tornado Outbreak. Iowa Environmental Mesonet. March 7, 2019. March 7, 2019.
  14. Web site: National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Birmingham, Alabama. Davisville - Corbett Crossroad EF-2 Tornado (Macon/Lee Counties) March 3, 2019. National Weather Service. March 5, 2019. March 5, 2019. Birmingham, Alabama. Alabama Event Report: EF2 Tornado . National Centers for Environmental Information . National Weather Service . 6 March 2021. Web site: Alabama Event Report: EF1 Tornado . National Centers for Environmental Information . National Weather Service . 6 March 2021.
  15. National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Mobile, Alabama. NWS Damage Survey For March 3, 2019 Butler and Crenshaw County Tornado Event. Iowa Environmental Mesonet. March 4, 2019. March 4, 2019.
  16. National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Birmingham, Alabama. County Road 8 EF-0 Tornado (Bullock County). National Weather Service. March 5, 2019. March 5, 2019.
  17. National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Birmingham, Alabama. County Road 79 EF-2 Tornado (Barbour County) March 3, 2019. National Weather Service. March 5, 2019. March 5, 2019.
  18. National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Tallahassee, Florida. Final NWS Tallahassee Damage Survey Results for March 3, 2019 Tornado Event. Iowa Environmental Mesonet. March 6, 2019. March 6, 2019.
  19. National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Columbia, South Carolina. NWS Damage Survey for 03/03/19 Tornado Event. Iowa Environmental Mesonet. March 4, 2019. March 4, 2019.
  20. National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Columbia, South Carolina. NWS Damage Survey for 03/03/19 Tornado Event. Iowa Environmental Mesonet. April 23, 2019. April 23, 2019.
  21. National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Charleston, South Carolina. NWS Damage Survey for 03/03/2019 Tornado Event. Iowa Environmental Mesonet. March 4, 2019. March 4, 2019.
  22. National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Columbia, South Carolina. NWS Damage Survey for 03/03/19 Tornado Event. Iowa Environmental Mesonet. March 15, 2019. March 15, 2019.
  23. National Weather Service in Tallahassee, Florida. Florida Event Report: EF0 Tornado. National Centers for Environmental Information. 2019. July 15, 2024.
  24. Web site: ArcGIS Web Application.
  25. Web site: March 3, 2019 Tornadoes . March 4, 2019 . NWS Peachtree City . March 19, 2019.
  26. Web site: Beauregard-Smiths Station Tornado - March 3, 2019 . National Weather Service Office in Birmingham, Alabama . March 5, 2019.
  27. Web site: Donegan . Brian . Alabama Tornado the First EF4 in U.S. Since 2017; Deadliest Since Moore, Oklahoma, EF5 Tornado in 2013 . The Weather Channel . March 6, 2019.
  28. Web site: Darden: This is the worst tornado to hit #LeeCounty since March 20, 1875 when an EF-4 hit. It is the worst March tornado for Alabama in terms of fatalities since March 21, 1932. #alwx. WSFA 12 News. March 7, 2019. Twitter.com. March 9, 2019.
  29. Web site: Lee County, Alabama Tornadoes . Tornado History Project . Storm Prediction Center . 8 December 2020.
  30. Web site: In Midwest, Winter Storm Scott Leaves Multiple Crashes, Road Closures, Flight Cancellations. The Weather Channel. 2019-03-03.
  31. https://www.masslive.com/weather/2019/03/how-much-snow-did-we-get-snowfall-totals-for-march-4-in-massachusetts.html How much snow did we get? Snowfall totals for March 4 in Massachusetts
  32. Web site: Snowstorm hits Philly region: Area braces for difficult Monday morning commute .
  33. https://www.timeout.com/new-york-kids/news/yes-nyc-schools-have-a-snow-day-on-march-4 Yes! NYC schools have a snow day on March 4
  34. https://www.weather.gov/okx/20190303_04_WinterStorm March 3-4, 2019 Winter Storm
  35. https://www.wunderground.com/article/news/news/2019-03-04-winter-storm-scott-slams-northeast-travel-mess Northeast Hit by Winter Storm Scott: 5 Injured After Plane Skids off Maine Airport Runway
  36. https://weather.com/safety/winter/news/2019-03-04-winter-storm-scott-photos Winter Storm Scott Slams Northeast (PHOTOS)
  37. Web site: Another one-two punch for the East Coast as two systems near. theweathernetwork.com-CA. 2019-03-02.
  38. Web site: Atlantic: Snowy pattern persists after potent winter wallop. theweathernetwork.com-CA. 2019-03-05.
  39. News: Chappell . Bill . Alabama's Tornado Death Toll Of 23 Is Final, Lee County Sheriff Says . 7 March 2019 . National Public Radio.
  40. Web site: Tornadoes in Alabama kill at least 23, a figure officials expect to rise . March 4, 2019 . ABC News . en . March 4, 2019.
  41. News: Alabama Tornado Updates: Four Children Are Among 23 Killed by Storms . Blinder . Alan . March 4, 2019 . The New York Times . March 4, 2019 . Stevens . Matt . en-US . 0362-4331.
  42. Web site: She lost 10 family members in Alabama tornadoes. 'Just why, why?'. NBC News. March 6, 2019 . en. 2019-03-07.
  43. Web site: Alabama reels in aftermath of deadly tornadoes: Live updates . March 4, 2019 . www.cnn.com . en . March 4, 2019.
  44. News: Alabama tornadoes kill at least 23 and cause 'catastrophic' damage . Guardian Staff . March 4, 2019 . The Guardian . March 4, 2019 . agencies . en-GB . 0261-3077.
  45. News: All missing people have been accounted for from deadly Alabama tornado, sheriff says. Bacon. John. March 6, 2019. USA Today. March 7, 2019. Hughes. Trevor.