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A tornado outbreak also occured in Arkansas on the same day as the Middle Tennessee outbreak, although earlier in the day. Most sources treat this as a separate outbreak, although the CNN story referenced in this article makes no distinction between the two. In order to keep things from beng too confusing, I'm going to limit this article to the Middle Tennessee outbreak (at least for now). Kaldari02:26, 12 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]
IMO, that would be part of the same outbreak - they were caused by the same system and were related. If there is solid information, they should go in this article which should be renamed something like Mid-April 1998 Tornado Outbreak (prefix needed to differentiate from the Birmingham Tornado of April 1998) or a better geographic name, depending on where all the tornadoes are found to be. CrazyC8303:23, 3 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I agree for the most part, although I'm concerned such a conclusion might be considered original research (without more solid info). Of all the sources I've looked at, only the CNN article seems to group them all together as one event. This article is also a bit problematic in that it was originally just about 1 tornado, then 4 (the 3 Nashville tornadoes and the F5), now 10, and perhaps soon about even more. Obviously the F3 in downtown Nashville is the most encyclopedic. As we broaden the scope of the article more it seems we may be in danger of losing the encyclopedic content within the lists and minutia. Do we really need to list every tornado that has ever occured within Wikipedia? Well, I guess that's a question for another place and time, but basically what I'm saying is that this article isn't sure what it wants to be. Is it an article about a tornado or a tornado outbreak? Kaldari06:05, 3 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I've notice several existing Tornado Sequences articles, in which the events consist of two or more rounds of severe weather (i.e May 2003 and January 1999). Maybe we should call it the Tornado Sequence of Mid-April 1998 or something like that. The tornado death toll is 12 for the day. I would put a new table with all 12 fatalities under a new table including those in Arkansas and Kentucky. I will wait a week to see if any opposes to that--JForget23:30, 17 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]
And also considering the large size of the low pressure and a long cold front [1] I am pretty much sure that it is from the same storm.--JForget23:33, 17 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]
If you think that's the best thing to do, go ahead with the changes. At some point, however, I think we may want to spin off a separate article about the tornado that hit downtown Nashville. There's certainly enough material out there to make a separate article on it. Kaldari23:05, 20 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Support the broader article. However, a completely new article for Nashville would be unprecedented (no other single tornado within a larger outbreak has an article independent of its outbreak). It should get a fairly lenghty section at the bottom of the article. CrazyC8323:41, 22 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I've included tornadoes on the 15th as well as other tornadoes outside of Tennessee on the 16th including Arkansas, Kentucky, Alabama, Georgia, Missouri and Michigan. Overall it gives a total of 61 tornadoes and 12 fatalities. I've put the source link to the THP site as the main reference as it uses data from the NOAA--JForget19:12, 22 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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