First Quote Added
4μ 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"The 1974 Super Tornado Outbreak was one of the worst weather days in U.S. history. [...] Before April 27, 2011, it was the tornado event everyone talked about."
"Technology has come a long way since then. In 1974, weather radar was crude by todayβs standards. We could only see a depiction of the precipitation over a large area. There was no Doppler radar, which allows us to peer inside of storms and see areas of rotation. We lacked the computer power to zoom in and pinpoint the most dangerous part of the storm, let alone track it in real time to give people in the path a heads up to when the storm would be in their backyard."
"When we hit the bottom of those basement steps, it sounded like a freight train was outside. I remember looking up at our basement window and all I could see was a brown swirling. I never prayed harder in my life. Then suddenly, it got deathly silent. You couldn't hear anything. No birds chirping. It was just still."
"Given the bottleneck of transmitting numerous warnings via teletype during the super outbreak, the NWS knew it needed a better way to get a warning directly to the public. The NOAA Weather Radio network expanded from only 50 to 60 stations mostly in large cities near the coasts to 330 more."