Tornado outbreak sequence of January 7–11, 2008

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Tornado outbreak of January 2008
Meteorological history
DurationJanuary 7–11, 2008
Tornado outbreak
Tornadoes73
Maximum ratingEF3 tornado
Duration3 days, 11 hours, 48 minutes
Overall effects
Casualties4 fatalities (+2 non-tornadic), 62 injuries
Damage$88 million (+ $41 million non–tornadic)
Areas affectedNorthwestern, Central and Southern United States

Part of the Tornadoes of 2008

An unseasonably strong tornado outbreak began on January 7, 2008, and continued for nearly four days across the Central and Southern United States, with the hardest hit area being southwestern Missouri, northwestern Arkansas, and the surrounding area. In addition, a strong supercell in northern Illinois and southeastern Wisconsin produced that region's first January tornadoes since 1967.

More tornadoes occurred across the Mississippi Valley on January 8 and after a break in the activity on January 9, another round of severe weather took place in the Southern United States (primarily Alabama and Mississippi) on January 10. Several damaging tornadoes were reported that day, although no one was killed. A separate, unrelated EF1 tornado also struck the northern suburbs of Vancouver, Washington. In total, over the four-day period, 73 tornadoes were confirmed and four people were killed.