April 12, 2020
3:01 PM| Date | April 12, 2020 |
| Time | 3:01 PM |
| County | Pickens |
| City | Vernon |
| Property Loss | $0 |
| Crop Loss | $0 |
| Source | NCEI 887480 |
5 S - 2 ENE Ashcraft Corner The tornado formed along County Road 47 (Bill Hill Church Road) about nine miles northeast of Reform in northeastern Pickens County. The tornado moved northeast, paralleled State Route 159, and ended just inside Fayette County along County Road 12. Several trees were snapped and uprooted along the path. The tornado damage path was 5.48 miles long and was 300 yards wide at its widest point. The maximum winds were estimated around 75 mph. The tornado affected mostly rural locations. Start: 33.4593/-87.8859 End: 33.5348/-87.8593
NWS EF Scale: F0
National Weather Service meteorologists surveyed damage in northeast Pickens County and determined that it was consistent with an EF0 tornado, with maximum winds near 75 mph.||The tornado formed along County Road 47 (Bill Hill Church Road) about nine miles northeast of the town of Reform. The tornado tracked northeast, paralleled State Route 159, and crossed into Fayette County along County Road 12. Several trees were snapped and uprooted along the path. The tornado affected mostly rural locations.
An upper-level low over the southwest United States evolved into a negatively-tilted shortwave trough as it moved over the southeastern United States. A warm front steadily moved northward during the morning and afternoon hours on Sunday, April 12. This allowed an unstable air mass to move northward and overspread much of the region. At the same time, very strong wind shear developed over Alabama as the upper trough neared the state.||An initial wave of severe storms affected areas near and north of Interstate 20, involving tornadoes, damaging straight-line winds, and some hail. Through the evening, a second wave of thunderstorms affected the remaining areas of Central Alabama with tornadoes and damaging straight-line winds. Flooding also resulted from training rainfall near and north of Interstate 20. Some roads became impassible or were washed out. This weather event was large in scope and produced severe weather from Oklahoma and Texas, through the southeastern United States, then up the east coast to New York.
Part of 27-tornado outbreak on April 12, 2020
An upper-level low over the southwest United States evolved into a negatively-tilted shortwave trough as it moved over the southeastern United States. A warm front steadily moved northward during the morning and afternoon hours on Sunday, April 12. This allowed an unstable air mass to move northward and overspread much of the region. At the same time, very strong wind shear developed over Alabama as the upper trough neared the state.||An initial wave of severe storms affected areas near and north of Interstate 20, involving tornadoes, damaging straight-line winds, and some hail. Through the evening, a second wave of thunderstorms affected the remaining areas of Central Alabama with tornadoes and damaging straight-line winds. Flooding also resulted from training rainfall near and north of Interstate 20. Some roads became impassible or were washed out. This weather event was large in scope and produced severe weather from Oklahoma and Texas, through the southeastern United States, then up the east coast to New York.