It was a day none of us will ever forget. The next day I was sent to Atkins to look at the damage and it was more heartbreaking than I ever imagined. I saw homes and lives ripped apart.
Below are radar animations of that day, pictures I took, and some viewer photos as well. Let's hope we never have anything like this again.
In this radar animation, you will see the supercell in front of the main line which caused the record breaking twister. This was a text book example of an individual cell in front of the main line rotating. We always watch those storms closely and now you know why. As the main squall line moved through Little Rock, an official wind gust of 67 mph was recorded. That's the 6th strongest on record.
When the main line came through Little Rock, it produced the 6th highest wind gust EVER recorded in Little Rock weather history at 67 mph. Below is an animation of that line coming through during the evening hours.
The actual tornado as it hit Atkins sent in from a KATV viewer. |
Another shot of the historic tornado as it moved into northern Arkansas. |
Photo courtesy of the National Weather Service in North Little Rock. This is an aerial view of the boat plant destroyed in Clinton, AR |
Track courtesy of the Tornado History Project |
This and the following few pictures I took in Atkins the next day. |
Atkins, Arkansas |
Atkins, Arkansas |
Photo from KATV crews the next day in Clinton, Arkansas |
Clinton, Arkansas |
Mountain View, Arkansas damage |
Here's the convective outlook that day ( 2-5-08) issued by the Storm Prediction Center. High risks are rare! |
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