Yes. Have a plan of where to go in in the event of a tornado. The best place to go is a basement or cellar and to crouch in a corner facing a wall. If you don't have a basement or cellar then choose an interior room or hallway on the lower part of your house. If you live in a mobile home choose a nearby sturdy building that you can get to quickly.
Keep a battery powered weather radio available and have a supply of food and water that does not need to be cooked or refrigerated.
Nothing. Tornadoes are beyond our control; we cannot stop them. We can only prepare for them.
go in your basement
Nothing. It is impossible to stop tornadoes. We can only warn people and help them prepare.
Nothing. We can prepare for tornadoes to reduce the number of people killed or injured, but we have no way of stopping or controlling them.
on the southern hemisphere tornadoes spin clockwise and on the north hemisphere tornadoes spin anticlockwise
you cannot prevent a tornado you can only prepare for one
In fact they did not prepare for the afterlife in the same ways.
Tornadoes are not controlled. Tornadoes are influenced by temperature, humidity, wind, and air pressure, wind interact in complex ways.
A better warning system will allow people to better prepare for an approaching tornado, meaning that fewer people will be killed or injured in tornadoes.
Currently, none. Most scientists have acknowledged that it is impossible to prevent tornadoes.
No. No natural disasters can be prevented. We can only prepare for them.
to prepare for a tornado you need to have canned food and water bottles ready because you do not know how much the tornado will last do not open windows or doors have a radio and check for news broadcasts and have faith in yourself and remember tornadoes are dangerous things so be aware