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More Nebraska big storm insanity
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<blockquote data-quote="Carlos" data-source="post: 60892" data-attributes="member: 7"><p>Seen just that same thing. With a difference. The mesocyclone was on the ground rotating as it approached Elkhart, IL. Inside of it was clearly 7 tornadoes also rotating with it. I didn't know that more than 1 tornado could form inside of a single storm. It was an amazing sight to see. A lot of pictures of the tornado/mesocyclone show it as a single, very large tornado. It may have started that way by Cantrell, IL. But as it approached Waynesville, IL it had become a long thin tornado that seem to disappear in the middle. It faded away shortly after.</p><p></p><p>We don't often get the big ones like that here. Usually they are little piddly things that tear up a mile or so, maybe a 100yds wide.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Carlos, post: 60892, member: 7"] Seen just that same thing. With a difference. The mesocyclone was on the ground rotating as it approached Elkhart, IL. Inside of it was clearly 7 tornadoes also rotating with it. I didn't know that more than 1 tornado could form inside of a single storm. It was an amazing sight to see. A lot of pictures of the tornado/mesocyclone show it as a single, very large tornado. It may have started that way by Cantrell, IL. But as it approached Waynesville, IL it had become a long thin tornado that seem to disappear in the middle. It faded away shortly after. We don't often get the big ones like that here. Usually they are little piddly things that tear up a mile or so, maybe a 100yds wide. [/QUOTE]
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