2011 Tuscaloosa–Birmingham tornado
|name=. Remove this parameter; the article title is used as the name by default.Clockwise from top: A CCTV still of the tornado in downtown Tuscaloosa; EF4 damage to a home in Tuscaloosa; trees debarked by the violent tornado; radar reflectivity and velocity images of the supercell that produced the tornado at 5:12 p.m. CDT (22:12 UTC) as it struck Tuscaloosa, with a debris ball clearly visible. | |
| Meteorological history | |
|---|---|
| Formed | April 27, 2011, 4:43 p.m. CDT (UTC−05:00) |
| Dissipated | April 27, 2011, 6:14 p.m. CDT (UTC–05:00) |
| Duration | 1 hour, 31 minutes |
| EF4 tornado | |
| on the Enhanced Fujita scale | |
| Max width | 2,600 yards (1.5 mi; 2.4 km) |
| Path length | 80.68 miles (129.84 km) |
| Highest winds | 190 mph (310 km/h) |
| Overall effects | |
| Fatalities | 64 (+8 indirect) |
| Injuries | 1,500+ |
| Damage | $2.4 billion (2011 USD) |
| Areas affected | Tuscaloosa to Birmingham, Alabama, United States |
Part of the 2011 Super Outbreak and Tornadoes of 2011 | |
During the late afternoon and early evening hours of April 27, 2011, a violent, deadly, and devastating high-end EF4 multi-vortex tornado, commonly known as either the Tuscaloosa–Birmingham tornado, or more simply the Tuscaloosa tornado, devastated portions of Tuscaloosa and Birmingham, Alabama, as well as smaller communities and rural areas between the two cities. It is one of the costliest tornadoes on record, and was one of the 367 tornadoes that occurred during the 2011 Super Outbreak: the largest tornado outbreak in United States history.
First touching down around 4:43 p.m. CDT in Greene County, Alabama, the tornado rapidly intensified and eventually reached a maximum path width of 1.5 miles (2.4 km) when it crossed I-65 north of Birmingham, and attained estimated wind speeds of 190 mph (310 km/h) shortly after passing through the city. It then went on to impact parts of Birmingham at high-end EF4 intensity, before rapidly weakening and eventually dissipating. In total, the tornado was on the ground for approximately an hour and a half, leaving catastrophic damage in its wake. Multiple television stations captured the tornado live during its track, and it is one of the most documented tornadoes of the entire Super Outbreak due to its proximity to the Birmingham and Tuscaloosa metropolitan areas.
In total, the tornado killed 64 people and injured well over 1,500. This was the third tornado to strike the city of Tuscaloosa in the prior decade, and the second in two weeks. The tornado is the second deadliest tornado in Alabama's history, just behind the Hackleburg–Phil Campbell tornado that occurred on the same day. The tornado caused approximately $2.4 billion (2011 USD), making it the costliest tornado in Alabama history and, at the time, the costliest tornado in the United States, before it was dethroned a month later by the Joplin EF5 tornado in Missouri. Following the storm, then-President Barack Obama toured the city of Tuscaloosa on April 29 and the wreckage.