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WEATHER REPORT
Grim search in ravaged US town as tornado kills 116

Deadliest tornadoes in US history
Joplin, Missouri (AFP) May 23, 2011 - The death toll from a tornado that struck Joplin, Missouri rose to 116 on Monday, making it the deadliest twister since 1947.

Here is a list of the top 10 deadliest tornadoes in US history:

1. 695 deaths - March 18, 1925 - Missouri/Illinois/Indiana

2. 317 deaths - May 6, 1840 - Natchez, Mississippi

3. 255 deaths - May 27, 1896 - St. Louis, Missouri

4. 216 deaths - April 5, 1936 - Tupelo, Mississippi

5. 203 deaths - April 6, 1936 - Gainesville, Georgia

6. 181 deaths - April 9, 1947 - Woodward, Oklahoma

7. 143 deaths - April 24, 1908 - Amite, Louisiana, Purvis, Mississippi

8. 117 deaths - June 12, 1899 - New Richmond, Wisconsin

9. 116 deaths - May 22, 2011 - Joplin, Missouri

10. 115 deaths - June 8, 1953 - Flint, Michigan

Modern record-keeping began in 1950. Officials say death counts for tornadoes in the 1800s and early 1900s should be treated as estimates.

SOURCE: The Storm Prediction Center of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

by Staff Writers
Joplin, Missouri (AFP) May 23, 2011
Rescue crews clawed through the rubble Monday searching for survivors after a tornado in Missouri killed 116 people, amid warnings that more powerful storms were bearing down on the area.

"That's all that's left," said resident Roger Dedick as he pointed to a section of foundation, the remains of his home of 17 years in Joplin after the deadliest single tornado in six decades ripped through the town.

He had had to use a metal bar to pry himself out of his crushed home.

Down the street, Carolyn Hall fought back tears as she and her teenage sons combed their destroyed home hoping to find some clothes and the family cat.

Only a few interior walls remained standing, but after a desperate search came a ray of hope when they found the terrified cat hiding under a bed.

Around the corner, Dottie and Tim Sumners had uncovered scores of framed photos and albums, precious memories that survived when the massive mile-wide tornado hit late Sunday.

"I'll never disregard the sirens again," said Dottie Sumners. "We have many times before."

Her husband looked on grimly at the scenes of devastation, and said they would rebuild their home of 33 years. "We'll make it," he said.

More than 2,000 buildings -- or about a third of the city of 50,000 near the border with Kansas and Oklahoma -- were damaged or destroyed, when the twister packing winds of up to 200 miles (320 kilometers) an hour came roaring through on Sunday with just a 24-minute warning.

The Joplin tornado is on course to be the deadliest single twister to strike the United States since modern record keeping began in 1950 -- matching the toll in a tornado in Flint, Michigan in 1953 that also left 116 people dead.

A single twister in 1925 is said to have left 695 dead in Missouri, Illinois and Indiana, but that was before accurate record-taking began.

Joplin residents were warned that more potent storms were on the way after Sunday's massive twister cut a swath of destruction four miles (6.4 kilometers) long and three quarters of a mile (more than a kilometer) wide.

"There are going to be some things out there that are going to be hard to see and stomach," Missouri Governor Jay Nixon said, as the grisly rescue effort began in earnest.

Some 1,150 wounded people were also treated in area hospitals, The Joplin Globe reported.

Flames and smoke from broken gas lines clouded the wreckage as block after block of homes and businesses were reduced to rubble and cars were tossed so violently into the air that nothing was left but crumpled heaps of metal.

Bryan Lemmons, who drove to Joplin to help the rescue efforts, recalled seeing an elderly woman searching in the rain for her cat. "There's so much loss. People are holding on to whatever they can... Which isn't much," he said.

Jeff Law, 23, was able to take shelter in a storm cellar and was overwhelmed by what he saw when he emerged.

"I've lived in this neighborhood my entire life, and I didn't know where I was," Law told the Springfield News-Leader. "Everything was unrecognizable, completely unrecognizable. It's like Armageddon."

Caring for the injured was made more difficult because the main hospital, Saint John's Regional Medical Center, had to be evacuated after suffering a direct hit -- the tornado ripped off its roof and smashed all its windows.

A tangled medical helicopter lay in the rubble of crushed cars, broken glass and medical records strewn outside the hospital.

President Barack Obama sent his "deepest condolences" to victims and said the federal government would provide whatever assistance was needed, as more severe weather was forecast for Oklahoma, Kansas, extreme northern Texas and southwestern Missouri.

North of the hardest hit areas, Missouri Southern State University campus was hastily turned into headquarters for the homeless and hungry, and 110 people had sought shelter by midday Monday.

Although Jeff Malley's house was destroyed, he survived. He, a friend and his dog Sprocket made it through by hunkering down in a closet.

"It was dark inside at first, then it was daylight," he said. The walls of the closet were the only part of the house left standing.

The storm was the deadliest of 73 tornadoes reported to the National Weather Service in nine central states over the weekend and comes after a horrific tornado outbreak left 361 dead in April across several US states.



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WEATHER REPORT
US tornado kills 116, warnings more storms on way
Joplin, Missouri (AFP) May 23, 2011
US states braced for more storms Monday after a tornado in Missouri killed 116 people, putting it on course to be the deadliest single twister to strike the United States in modern history. Forecasters warned more potent storms were on the way in the area around Joplin, Missouri where the massive twister struck Sunday leading to 116 deaths, matching the deadliest tornado in modern US records ... read more







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