A tornado usually follows a relatively straight path, though some tornadoes may shift a bit along this. Occasionally tornadoes may follow a curved path or, rarely, a meandering, looping path. Most tornado paths are a fraction of a mile to three miles long and a few dozen yards wide, however in some cases paths may be dozens of miles long and over a mile, or even two miles wide. Within the path structures and vegetation will sustain varying degrees of damage depending on the intensity of the tornado and what part ot he tornado passes over a particular point. Damage may range from broken tree limbs and peeled roof tiles to complete destruction of strong buildings. In some cases looping or curved paths of more severe damage may be noted within the main damage path indicating the passage of suction vortices withing the main circulation.
The Tri-State tornado had the longest damage path. 219 miles
The worst tornado in U.S. history, the Tri-State tornado of 1925, was on the ground for 3 hours and 29 minutes. The worst in world history, the Daulatput-Saturia tornado of 1989, had a path length of 50 miles but it is not known how long it was on the ground. However, given the path length it was probably on the ground for an hour to two hours.
The air in and near a tornado generally follows a spiral path as it moves inward and upward around the tornado's center of rotation. In some tornadoes, however, it is more complicated than this as there may be smaller subvortices embedded in the main vortex. The tornado itself usually moves in a fairly straight line.
The median width for a tornado is about 50 yards, but sizes Over a mile are not unheard of. The largest tornado on record cut a path that was at one point 2.5 miles wide.
The term may be used to describe a tornado with two visible suction vorticies, or two separate tornadoes on the ground at the same time in the same general area.
A tornado's path is narrow and usually relatively straight.
No. A tornado's path is virtually unpredicatable.
Yes, a tornado can wreak everything in its path.
The shortest tornado path on record was 7 feet long.
The longest tornado path ever recorded was 219 miles long.
The longest tornado damage path on record is 219 miles.
The average tornado has a path length of 2 to 3 miles.
A tornado harms anyone who is or has property in the the path.
The Joplin, Missouri tornado of 2011 had a damage path of 22 miles.
A tornado moves in a relatively narrow path on land
The average tornado damage path is about 50 yards wide and 5 miles long.
The possessive form of the noun tornado is tornado's. Example: A trail of destruction marked the tornado's path.