Weather

Confirmed Tornado Touches Down In Mercer County: NWS

The National Weather Service said the landspout tornado flipped cars and uprooted several trees in Mercer County on Friday.

LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP, NJ — A confirmed EF-0 landspout tornado touched down in Mercer County on Friday evening, the National Weather Service confirmed.

In a report released Saturday, the NWS said the confirmed twister formed around 6 p.m. in Lawrence Township. Forecasters said it began near Johnson Road and Brunswick Avenue intersection, where it uprooted and damaged multiple trees.

Forecasters said the tornado then moved northeast into a small wooded area before hitting a post office parking lot and causing a half-dozen vehicles to flip. The landspout dissipated shortly after, forecasters said.

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The NWS report said the twister packed 80 mph winds and left a path that was 0.13 miles long.

Forecasters classified the twister as a landspout, a typically smaller and weaker tornado with a narrow, rope-like condensation funnel that forms without a supercell or rotating updraft, according to the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration.

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Waterspouts are similar to landspouts, except they occur over water. The strength of these types of tornadoes tends to be EF-2 or less.

Friday's tornado spawned as severe thunderstorms lashed New Jersey with heavy rains and strong winds. More than 40,000 homes and businesses lost power as storms moved across the state, according to a NJ Advance Media report.

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