Paths of the 148 tornadoes
generated during the 1974 Super Outbreak. |
|
Type | Tornado outbreak |
---|---|
Duration | April 3–4, 1974 |
Tornadoes confirmed | 148 confirmed |
Max rating1 | F5 tornado |
Duration of tornado outbreak2 | ≈18 hours |
Damage | $3.5 billion (2005 USD) |
Casualties | 319 fatalities, 5,484 injuries |
Areas affected | Midwestern and Southern United States, Ontario, Canada |
1Most severe tornado damage; see Fujita scale 2Time from first tornado to last tornado |
1Most severe tornado damage; see Fujita scale
The 1974 Super Outbreak was the second-largest tornado outbreak on record for a single 24-hour period, just behind the 2011 Super Outbreak. It was also the most violent tornado outbreak ever recorded, with 30 F4/F5 tornadoes confirmed. From April 3 to April 4, 1974, there were 148 tornadoes confirmed in 13 U.S. states and the Canadian province of Ontario. In the United States, tornadoes struck Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, and New York. The entire outbreak caused more than $600 million (1974 USD) in damage in the United States alone, and extensively damaged approximately 900 sq mi (2,331 km2) along a total combined path length of 2,600 mi (4,184 km). At one point, as many as 15 separate tornadoes were ongoing at the same time.
The Super Outbreak of April 3–4, 1974 remains one of the most outstanding severe convective weather episodes of record in the continental United States. The outbreak far surpassed previous and succeeding events in severity, longevity and extent, with the notable exception of the 2011 Super Outbreak, which lasted from April 25 to 28. With a death toll of 319, this outbreak would not be surpassed until the 2011 Super Outbreak, which killed 324 people.