Fort Worth Tornado
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The Fort Worth Tornado is a tornado that occurred on March 28, 2000 moving across the downtown area of Fort Worth, Texas (USA).
The tornado passed through the west side of Fort Worth at around 6:00 p.m. It tore a 3 mile (5 km) path through the city blowing out windows in many of the highrises downtown, and destroyed one office building and a church. The tornado was approximately one-quarter of a mile (0.4 km) wide and F3 on the Fujita scale. Two people were killed by the tornado and over 100 were injured, three critically. A third person was killed by hail and two drowned.
The heavy rain and hail that followed the tornado damaged many interior areas that actually survived the F2 winds. Another tornado hit in the southern Arlington and Grand Prairie area.
A KXAS camera in downtown Fort Worth was broadcasting during the 6 p.m. weather segment and may have broadcast parts of the tornado.
This is not the first time the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex has been hit by a tornado. Another notable tornado hit Dallas on April 2, 1957. That tornado was among the most photographed tornadoes of the 20th century. It killed 10 people.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Preliminary Information on Ft. Worth Tornado (National Weather Service at Ft. Worth)
- Satellite imagery (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
- Damage Survey and Assessment of Fort Worth Tornado, 28 March 2000
- News Report W/Footage
- News Report (USA Today}
- March 2000 Storm Data report(National Weather Service at Ft. Worth)
- Final Storm Data report (National Climatic Data Center)