Alabama ‘supersell’ that created the tornado captured in the satellite image



Heavy weather was visible from outer space this week in the mid-south.

An advanced image from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) captured a “supersell” in the GOES East Satellite on Thursday that created a massive tornado in Alabama near Brent and Centerville.

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The agency wrote in a message on Twitter on Friday with a 16-second clip, “In the 16-second period, you can see lightning with thunderstorms during March 25.”

As many as 10 tornadoes erupted in both Alabama and Georgia starting Thursday.

The hurricane continued to pass through the area early Friday morning, bringing the EF-4 tornado to the village of Nunan, northwest, which left the city looking like a “battlefield.”

While in other states the system moved eastward with hurricanes and dangerous flash-flooding – a hurricane also landed in Vermont on Friday, injuring at least two people.

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A report said North Carolina’s South Fork River began flooding its banks in Cramerton earlier in the day, forcing authorities to close a nearby pier, according to a report.

Residents of Rochester, NY, off the east coast, were surprised to see what they considered to be massive tornadoes or waterspouts, but turned out to be “messy” clouds – the formation of low-lying clouds that connect to the main base. Storm but does not turn.

More than 1,000 people in western New York were struck by strong winds from the Empire State, and dangerous conditions are expected to continue in the east and south over the weekend.

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The National Weather Service (NWS) predicts the danger of a separate tornado as far as New Jersey, however, another powerful storm system will move south and southeast this weekend, a report said.

The NOAA said severe hurricanes would be possible in the lower Mississippi and Tennessee valleys and all hazards were possible, including more tornadoes, harmful wind gusts, hail and rain floods.