National Weather Service United States Department of Commerce
Geneva County, Alabama Tornado of May 10, 2014

Several small supercells formed in far southeastern Alabama on the afternoon of May 10. The leading cell in the group generated a tornado in southeastern Geneva County. A National Weather Service Survey Team found that an EF1 tornado touched down just north of the Florida State line along County Road 9. The tornado began at approximately 3:08 pm CDT Saturday afternoon and lifted about 8 minutes later. Figure 1 shows the approximate track of the tornado. Figure 2 shows a home that was damaged by the tornado. Figure 3 shows damage to a metal barn where the concrete bases of the steel supports were pulled from the ground.

Map showing the approximate track of EF1 tornado that touched down in Geneva County, AL, on May 10, 2014.

Figure 1. Map showing the approximate track of EF1 tornado that touched down in Geneva County, AL, on May 10, 2014. Click here for the KML File.

 

A home along County Road 9 in Geneva County damaged by an EF1 tornado on May 10, 2014.

Figure 2. A home along County Road 9 in Geneva County damaged by an EF1 tornado on May 10, 2014.

 

A metal barn destroyed by an EF1 tornado on May 10, 2014.

Figure 3. A metal barn destroyed by an EF1 tornado on May 10, 2014. The concrete foundations for the steel supports were pulled from the ground (inset).

 

Figure 4 shows 4-panel images from the KEOX radar valid as the tornado was touching down. The yellow circle denotes the approximate location of the tornado. Notice the distinctive supercellular shape of the storm in the reflectivity and the rotation (red next to green) in the Storm Relative Velocity panel. This circulation was even stronger higher off the ground. The circled area of low Correlation Coefficient values actually indicates debris being lifted into the air by the tornado.

A 4-panel image from the Ft. Rucker, AL (KEOX) from 10 May 2014. Clockwise from top left, the images depict base reflectivity, base velocity, storm-relative velocity and correlation coefficient, all on the 0.5-degree slice. The approximate location of the tornado is indicated by the yellow circle.

Figure 4. A 4-panel image from the Ft. Rucker, AL (KEOX) from 10 May 2014. Clockwise from top left, the images depict base reflectivity, base velocity, storm-relative velocity and correlation coefficient, all on the 0.5-degree slice. The approximate location of the tornado is indicated by the yellow circle. Click the image for a larger view.

 

This page was authored by Parks Camp. The NWS damage survey was conducted by Alex Lamers and Katie Moore.