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- Tornadoes - Tornado Facts, Pictures and Articles | Live Science
Tornadoes are the most powerful, unpredictable and destructive weather systems on Earth The National Weather Service (NWS) defines a Tornado as a violently rotating column of air in contact with
- Tornado Facts: Causes, Formation Seeking Shelter - Live Science
Tornado wind and debris cause most of the structural damage suffered, but nearly half of the injuries from such disasters occur after the tornado has left, during rescue work and cleanup
- Take shelter!: Tornado strikes Floridas Seminole County, destroying . . .
The Florida tornado was EF2, meaning winds of 111 to 135 mph (179 to 217 km h) For context, the most powerful EF5 tornadoes have winds of more than 200 mph (322 km h)
- More people are in harms way: Tornadoes are shifting east of Tornado . . .
A string of deadly tornadoes, violent dust storms and fast-moving wildfires ripped across several midwestern and southern U S states over the weekend, leaving at least 42 people dead, according
- 12 Twisted Tornado Facts - Live Science
The deadliest single tornado was the "Tri-state" tornado that killed 695 people along a 219 mile long track across parts of Missouri, Illinois and Indiana on March 18, 1925 9 What city has been
- Tornado Safety Myths | What To Do During A Tornado - Live Science
The tornado bucked a downward trend in tornado deaths, not only because of its powerful EF4 strength, but also because it hit highly populated areas For more tornado safety tips, read through the
- Amazing Tornado Facts | Tornado Pictures - Live Science
A tornado over the plains of Kansas on May 23, 2008, when an outbreak of tornadoes hit from eastern Colorado to Oklahoma from May 23-24 (Image credit: Sean Waugh NOAA NSSL)
- Huge, 7-mile scar torn across Australias Nullarbor . . . - Live Science
Australia's tornado history Tornadoes are violent, spinning columns of air that drop from thunderstorms to the ground, bringing wind speeds often exceeding 124 miles (200 kilometers) an hour
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