No, a single tornado can not live that long.
The weather system making tornadoes could stretch that far and make tornadoes in both states.
The deadliest Kansas tornado on record was the Udall, Kansas F5 tornado of May 25, 1955 with 80 deaths.
The worst tornado to hit Cowley County Kansas was the Udall, Kansas F5 tornado of May 25, 1955. This tornado killed 80 people, making it the deadliest tornado in Kansas history.
tornadoes form most commonly in tornado alley which includes kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Colorado, Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, minnesota, South Dakota and wyoming. but they MOST commonly occur in Texas, Oklahoma and kansas.
There were no tornado related deaths in Kansas in 2000.
A tornado in Kansas.
The probability of a tornado hitting Kansas is 100%. Dozens of tornadoes occur in Kansas every year.
No. It would be better to say that Kansas is in Tornado Alley. Tornado Alley extends from northern Texas to Iowa.
yes
Yes. Tornadoes are fairly common in Minnesota.
Tornado Alley is located on the central plains of the United States, extending north from Texas, through Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska, to South Dakota and Iowa, and including parts of western Missouri and southern Minnesota.
North and South Dakota, South-West Minnesota, Iowa, East Wyoming, Nebraska, Kansas, East Colorado, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Texas.
Minnesota