July also brought record levels of activity, while August was also well above average (partially due to Hurricane Andrew).
On March 9, an 880 yard wide F4 tornado carved a 20 mile path through Sharkey, Washington, and Humphreys Counties in Mississippi, injuring one person.
[4] A powerful F4 tornado hit the small village of Estacion Lopez (200 inhabitants), in the center of the province of Buenos Aires in Argentina.
After destroying 90% of households and tossing vehicles for hundreds of meters, the storm was categorized as one of the strongest tornadoes in the history of Argentina and the Southern hemisphere.
[4] One of the largest tornado outbreaks on record affected portions of the Central United States from June 14 to the 18th.
The outbreak began on June 14 when six tornadoes touched down in Colorado and Idaho.
[4] After moving across South Florida without spawning any tornadoes the day before, Hurricane Andrew spawned an F3 tornado in LaPlace, Louisiana as it approached the Louisiana coast on August 25, killing two people and injuring 32 others.
Over the next three days, a tornado outbreak struck areas from the Lower Mississippi Valley up the Appalachian Mountains corridor.
A three-day tornado outbreak struck large parts of the eastern and Midwestern U.S. on November 21–23.
Several houses were destroyed, however damage was light due to the tornadoes striking a relatively unpopulated rural area.
The first one uprooted 22 trees and caused damage to outdoor patio furniture in Moorpark.
The second one struck Westminster near Garden Grove, where former actor Jennette McCurdy was raised at.
Trees were blown down, skylights were torn off from a roof, and water was sucked from street gutters for one city block.
The fourth one struck San Clemente moving through a neighborhood, ripping out a small grove of trees, and toppling a light standard.