EF# |
Location |
County / Parish |
State |
Start Coord. |
Time (UTC) |
Path length |
Max width |
Summary |
EF0 |
E of Madison |
Stanton |
NE |
41.8682°N 97.3351°W / 41.8682; -97.3351 (Madison (Oct. 4, EF0)) |
2132 – 2142 |
4.71 mi (7.58 km) |
100 yd (91 m) |
No damage was reported with this tornado as it moved through rural areas southwest of Stanton.[21] |
EF2 |
E of Royal |
Antelope |
NE |
42.246°N 98.092°W / 42.246; -98.092 (Royal (Oct. 4, EF2)) |
2148 – 2201 |
6.64 mi (10.69 km) |
264 yd (241 m) |
A strong tornado touched down south-southeast of Royal and ended just to the east-northeast of town. Several farmsteads were damaged (with outbuildings being the primary structures impacted) and numerous trees and power lines were downed.[22] |
EF4 |
SW of Wayne to NNW of Wakefield |
Wayne, Dixon |
NE |
42.128°N 97.077°W / 42.128; -97.077 (Wayne (Oct. 4, EF4)) |
2212 – 2253 |
18.94 mi (30.48 km) |
2,394 yd (2,189 m) |
See article on this tornado – A large multiple-vortex tornado, the first EF4 tornado in Nebraska since May 22, 2004, caused substantial damage along its path. Two farmsteads were struck southwest of Wayne, and many sheds and barns were either damaged or destroyed. Two homes in this area sustained EF3-strength damage as well. The tornado moved into the east side of Wayne, causing severe damage to a softball complex, damaging farm equipment at a dealership, and either damaging or completely destroying many large industrial metal buildings at an industrial park, some of which were either badly mangled or completely reduced to rubble. At this point, the tornado had reached its peak intensity, with widespread EF3 damage, and a few pockets of low-end EF4-strength damage were noted. It then directly hit the Wayne Municipal Airport, where two hangars were flattened, leading to the destruction of 15 planes, and the AWOS was shredded and scattered over unknown distances. The tornado then caused EF2 damage to another farmstead before crossing into Dixon County, where it narrowed, weakened, and eventually dissipated after causing roof, window, and siding damage to a few more houses, overturning a camper, and either heavily damaging or destroying a grain bin and numerous farm buildings, as well as farm equipment. Many trees were downed, and crops were flattened along the path. Fifteen people were injured by the tornado including John Dunning, Chief Information Officer of Wayne State College, who was critically injured, but has since recovered. He would have likely died had he stayed in his truck. This tornado caused $50.5 million, mainly in Wayne.[23][24][25] This became the first F4/EF4 tornado in October in the US since the Windsor Locks, Connecticut tornado of 1979, and the first tornado in Nebraska in October since 2001.[26] |
EF3 |
SSE of Creighton to N of Bazile Mills |
Antelope, Knox |
NE |
42.4339°N 97.8817°W / 42.4339; -97.8817 (Creighton (Oct. 4, EF3)) |
2220 – 2236 |
6.43 mi (10.35 km) |
590 yd (540 m) |
This intense tornado touched down just inside Antelope County (to the south-southeast of Creighton) before moving north and into Knox County, where it dissipated 4 miles (6.4 km) north of Creighton. It was initially weak with damage confined to irrigation systems, siding, and shingles. The tornado then strengthened and completely destroyed a building that housed antique Trackers (scattering rubble for the equivalent of three city blocks) before hitting the Creighton Municipal Airport, where several buildings were either heavily damaged or destroyed, including three hangars receiving roof, garage, and siding damage and a storage building losing its roof. The airport beacon was blown away as well. The tornado then took a track to the northwest, where a 10,000-bushel grain bin was completely destroyed, and five more irrigation systems where destroyed. Many trees were downed, and power poles snapped at their base as well.[27] |
EF2 |
SW of Macy, NE to E of Bronson, IA |
Thurston (NE), Monona (IA), Woodbury (IA) |
NE, IA |
42.0805°N 96.3861°W / 42.0805; -96.3861 (Macy (Oct. 4, EF2)) |
2255 – 2347 |
25.62 mi (41.23 km) |
250 yd (230 m) |
This long-tracked, strong tornado began southwest of Macy before moving through the town. Six homes in the town were either heavily damaged or destroyed, while twelve more homes and one business sustained minor damage. Numerous vehicles, a center pivot irrigation system, and several buildings at farmsteads were damaged as well. The tornado crossed the Missouri River into Iowa west-northwest of Whiting and continued north-northeastward to the west of Sloan, where it spawned the EF1 satellite tornado listed below. Two buildings were destroyed southeast of Salix and open-air buildings were severely damaged at a dairy farm east of Salix. Other homes and buildings were either severely damaged or destroyed between Salix and Bronson before the tornado lifted just east of Bronson. Many trees and four power poles were downed, and corn crops were flattened along the path. Two people were injured, both in Thurston County.[28] |
EF0 |
ESE of Allen |
Dixon |
NE |
42.3941°N 96.7337°W / 42.3941; -96.7337 (Allen (Oct. 4, EF0)) |
2259 – 2301 |
0.68 mi (1.09 km) |
50 yd (46 m) |
A brief tornado caused no damage.[29] |
EF1 |
W of Sloan |
Woodbury |
IA |
42.2206°N 96.2633°W / 42.2206; -96.2633 (Sloan (Oct. 4, EF1)) |
2317 – 2320 |
1.17 mi (1.88 km) |
100 yd (91 m) |
This was a satellite tornado to the long-tracked EF2 tornado listed above. Trees were downed and farm buildings were either damaged or destroyed.[30] |
EF1 |
NNW of Jackson, NE to SSE of Jefferson, SD |
Dakota (NE), Union (SD) |
NE, SD |
42.4918°N 96.59°W / 42.4918; -96.59 (Jackson (Oct. 4, EF1)) |
2325 – 2335 |
5.89 mi (9.48 km) |
400 yd (370 m) |
A tornado touched down in Dakota County, causing no damage before crossing the Missouri River into South Dakota. It then damaged homes, overturned an irrigation system, and downed many trees in a subdivision west of McCook Lake before dissipating. One of the homes had a collapsed chimney, carport, porch roof, and walls of a garage, and at least four other houses had roof, siding, and/or gutter damage.[31] |
EF1 |
NE of Jefferson, SD |
Union (SD), Plymouth (IA) |
SD, IA |
42.570°N 96.5562°W / 42.570; -96.5562 (Jefferson (Oct. 4, EF1)) |
2335 – 2345 |
6.47 mi (10.41 km) |
800 yd (730 m) |
This tornado touched down south of Jefferson just after the previous tornado lifted, damaging a feedlot before crossing I-29. The roof and gutters of a house and the walls and roof of at least two storage equipment buildings were severely damaged, a road sign was damaged, several grain bins were either blown over or crushed, trees and power poles were downed, and corn crops were flattened. One of the grain bins was wrapped around a house, causing damage to the roof, siding, and gutters of the house. The tornado tracked in total for 3 miles (4.8 km) in South Dakota before crossing the Big Sioux River into Plymouth County, Iowa and lifting 5 miles (8.0 km) northeast of Jefferson after causing no damage.[32] |
EF4 |
SW of Climbing Hill to W of Washta |
Woodbury, Cherokee |
IA |
42.3319°N 96.1086°W / 42.3319; -96.1086 (Climbing Hill (Oct. 4, EF4)) |
2335 – 0017 |
24.94 mi (40.14 km) |
2,600 yd (2,400 m) |
This very large, violent tornado tracked northeast through rural Woodbury and Cherokee counties, moving west and north of Climbing Hill, southeast of Moville and Pierson, and northwest of Correctionville before dissipating west of Washta. Numerous houses were either heavily damaged or destroyed, with some losing their entire roofs, having collapse of walls, and being shifted off of their foundations. Many sheds, outbuildings, barns, silos, pieces of farm equipment, and garages were destroyed, and a car was thrown 30 feet (9.1 m). Farm equipment was tossed about 400 yards (370 m) at a farmstead south of Pierson, including a large grain cart that put gouges in a road and had its axle and wheels broken off, and many trees and power lines were downed along the path.[33] |
EF1 |
NW of Hinton |
Plymouth |
IA |
42.6758°N 96.4453°W / 42.6758; -96.4453 (Hinton (Oct. 4, EF1)) |
2350 – 2352 |
1.11 mi (1.79 km) |
100 yd (91 m) |
Farm buildings were damaged, and trees were downed.[34] |
EF0 |
E of Adaville |
Plymouth |
IA |
42.7464°N 96.3815°W / 42.7464; -96.3815 (Adaville (Oct. 4, EF0)) |
2355 – 2356 |
1.28 mi (2.06 km) |
50 yd (46 m) |
A brief tornado downed several trees.[35] |
EF0 |
NNE of Quimby |
Cherokee |
IA |
42.6879°N 95.622°W / 42.6879; -95.622 (Cherokee (Oct. 4, EF0)) |
0041 – 0043 |
0.55 mi (0.89 km) |
50 yd (46 m) |
A brief tornado caused no damage.[36] |
EF0 |
SW of Cherokee |
Cherokee |
IA |
42.7167°N 95.5901°W / 42.7167; -95.5901 (Cherokee (Oct. 4, EF0)) |
0046 – 0047 |
0.4 mi (640 m) |
50 yd (46 m) |
A brief tornado caused no damage.[37] |
EF0 |
NE of Cherokee |
Cherokee |
IA |
42.836°N 95.3967°W / 42.836; -95.3967 (Cherokee (Oct. 4, EF0)) |
0118 – 0119 |
0.34 mi (550 m) |
50 yd (46 m) |
A brief tornado to the east-southeast of Larrabee caused no damage.[38] |
EF1 |
SSW of Alta |
Buena Vista |
IA |
42.6032°N 95.3649°W / 42.6032; -95.3649 (Alta (Oct. 4, EF1)) |
0133 – 0142 |
5.45 mi (8.77 km) |
200 yd (180 m) |
This tornado touched down 5 miles (8.0 km) south-southwest of Alta and ended just outside the south side of town. A few farmsteads were damaged, with a drive-thru garage and several outbuildings suffering significant damage at one farmstead, farm equipment being damaged, a school suffering roof and air conditioning damage, and a baseball complex sustaining considerable damage, including to bleachers.[39] |
EF0 |
NW of Webb |
Clay |
IA |
42.978°N 95.0574°W / 42.978; -95.0574 (Webb (Oct. 4, EF0)) |
0147 – 0148 |
0.71 mi (1.14 km) |
100 yd (91 m) |
A brief tornado to the south-southwest of Gillett Grove downed a few trees.[40] |