The USA #precipitation total this #winter was 7.71 inches, 0.92 above avg – and ranked among the wettest 1/3 on record. @NOAA #StateOfClimate https://t.co/lmXxMp2XhJ pic.twitter.com/H4j5l2WeaR
— NOAA NCEI Climate (@NOAANCEIclimate) March 6, 2020
The EF4 in Putnam Co. was devastating…and yet it could have been worse
— Greg Diamond (@gdimeweather) March 6, 2020
And the reason it wasn't? Another tornado! @NWSNashville hypothesized the EF0 near Goffton stole some of energy feeding the EF4 causing it to dissipate right before it plowed into the heart of Cookeville pic.twitter.com/npUDYz5vA4
The Year in Review Calendar highlights the most impactful events that occurred each month across the SW Missouri Ozarks and far SE Kansas. pic.twitter.com/fhto6TiiFb
— NWS Springfield (@NWSSpringfield) March 6, 2020
Here are preliminary maps of the four #tornado tracks we've determined from the March 3, 2020 #tornadoes. Damage surveys will continue today in Humphreys and Cumberland Counties and additional tornado tracks may be found #tnwx pic.twitter.com/BJJrifqaKu
— NWS Nashville (@NWSNashville) March 6, 2020
Absolutely stunning #bombogenesis near #Japan! HT @severeweatherEU. https://t.co/5CzTqEZMBD pic.twitter.com/LTwZmFOAQQ
— UW-Madison CIMSS (@UWCIMSS) March 6, 2020
One minute imagery of stratocumulus clouds over the open Atlantic Ocean.
— CIRA (@CIRA_CSU) March 9, 2020
More: https://t.co/nmYLVrGa59 pic.twitter.com/sdGotHyb2e