April 11, 2013
3:18 PM| Date | April 11, 2013 |
| Time | 3:18 PM |
| County | Bibb |
| City | Centreville |
| Property Loss | $0 |
| Crop Loss | $0 |
| Source | NCEI 449847 |
National Weather Service meteorologists surveyed damage in southern Bibb County and have determined that the damage was due to an EF-1 tornado, with winds of 90 mph. The tornado touched down near the intersection of Abercrombie Road (County Road 51) and Harrisburg Road in the Talladega National Forest of southern Bibb County. The only structural damage occurred at the beginning of the path where a home had siding torn off. Otherwise, the damage was confined to trees. The tornado strengthened as it paralleled County Road 51, snapping or uprooting numerous trees about 3 miles along the path. The tornado continued northeast and crossed Highway 219 and Highway 82. The tornado weakened as it continued northeast across Antioch Road (County Road 20) and Highway 139. The tornado eventually lifted immediately west of the Chilton County Line on County Road 2.
Severe thunderstorms ahead of and along a cold front moved across Central Alabama on Thursday, April 11th. Storms along the cold front formed into a quasi-linear convective system, causing wind damage and producing seven tornadoes across the area. Ahead of the line, strong daytime heating and increasing instabilities coupled with strong diffluence aloft created prime conditions for discrete thunderstorms to form. These storms caused wind damage across portions of northeast Central Alabama during the late afternoon.
Part of 9-tornado outbreak on April 11, 2013
Severe thunderstorms ahead of and along a cold front moved across Central Alabama on Thursday, April 11th. Storms along the cold front formed into a quasi-linear convective system, causing wind damage and producing seven tornadoes across the area. Ahead of the line, strong daytime heating and increasing instabilities coupled with strong diffluence aloft created prime conditions for discrete thunderstorms to form. These storms caused wind damage across portions of northeast Central Alabama during the late afternoon.