Yes, tornadoes have been known to kill birds and not always leave them in one piece. While a hammer could easily become a projectile during a tornado, its chances of hitting a bird are probably quite remote.
well tornadoes can badly damage or destroy parts of communities
It depends on the intensity of tornado. The very strong will completely destroy almost all buildings. Those that remain intact will be badly damaged. The most violent tornadoes can also scour away topsoil and peel asphalt from roads.
The effects of tornadoes are local rather than global. Tornadoes can devastate towns, sometimes destroying whole neighborhoods. The damage and loss of productivity can badly damage an area's economy.
It depends on the tornado. A weak tornado of EF0 or EF1 strength might knock down a fence or two, damage or destroy a barn, or blow apart a few hay bales. A stronger tornado of EF2 or EF3 strength could easily destroy a barn and badly damage or destroy a farm house. Livestock may be killed. At this point a farmer's life is in notable danger. A violent tornado of EF4 or EF5 strength can completely destroy an entire farm. In some EF5 tornadoes, farms have essentially vanished, leaving the concrete foundations of buildings as the only evidence that they ever existed. In some cases tornadoes such as this have killed entire families.
it can kill them, destroy landmarks, houses, buildings, highways, and hurt them very badly
A tornado will affect the environment very badly because if a tornado ever comes then that will do a lot of damage! it can take down a tree! it can destroy a house!i hope this answer works for you. ;)
If they are very badly damaged, then the water could destroy your Ugg boots. If they aren't badly damaged, then the best thing you could do is just let them dry out.
Tornadoes can badly damage or destroy parts of communities. Often injuring and killing some while leaving others without homes. Some commutes such as Picher, Oklahoma and Manchester, South Dakota have been abandoned after being hit.
Tornadoes vary greatly in intensity and there is in fact a scale that uses the severity of damage to determine intensity. Winds can range anywhere from 65 mph to over 300 mph. Most tornadoes are rated EF0, with estimated winds of 65 to 85 mph. These tornadoes cause some damage to roofs, gutters, and siding, as well as breaking tree limbs and toppling weakly-rooted trees. Somewhat fewer tornadoes are rated EF1, with estimated winds of 86 to 110 mph. These tornadoes can badly damage roofs, flip over trailers, and break windows. Stronger tornadoes are rated EF2, with estimated winds of 111 to 135 mph. These tornadoes tear the roofs from houses, completely destroy trailers and lift cars off the ground. A small percentage of tornadoes are rated EF3, with estimated winds of 136 to 165 mph. These tornadoes tear down the walls of houses, and uproot most trees, reducing the largest branches to stubs. About 1% of tornadoes are rated EF4, with estimated winds of 166 to 200 mph. These tornadoes level houses, leaving piles of debris, strip the bark from trees and can even damage road surfaces. Less that 0.1% of tornadoes are rated EF5 with winds of over 200 mph, sometimes exceeding 300mph. These tornadoes can destroy almost anything. Well-built houses are torn clean off their foundations. Even two tornadoes of the same rating can cause different amounts of damage, depending on how much of the path experiences the strongest winds. Additionally tornadoes vary in size and how far they travel. A large, and long lived tornado is going to affect a much larger area than a brief, small tornado and probably cause more damage. Where they occur also affects the damage. A tornado that goes over open farmland will cause more damage than one that goes through a city or town.
The effecst depend on the size and strength of the tornado and on where it hits. In many cases some kind of damage will occur to vegetation and/or property. In most cases the damage will be notable but not particularly severe. People may be killed in such situations, but deaths are rare. Stronger tornadoes can very badly damage or destroy man-made structures and can tear apart large numbers of trees. These tornadoes result in fatalities more frequently. In the worst cases everything in a localized area may be completely destroyed. Such tornadoes often result in multiple deaths. Where a tornado occurs is also crucial. Some tornadoes move through sparsely populated countryside, hitting little or nothing and so causing fairly little damage if any. Some tornadoes hit communities, sometimes even major cities. Weak tornado still usually do not cause large amounts of damage, but when this happens with violent tornadoes the effects can be devastating. In the worst cases whole neigborhoods can be destroyed and dozens killed.
Even relatively week tornadoes, which do little more than peel shingles and knock down a few trees, can cause power outages. Stronger tornadoes can leave many buildings badly damaged or destroyed and pose a substantial threat of injury and death to anyone not in an adequate shelter. In the works cases, a large, violent tornado can level entire neighborhoods and blow houses away, leaving dozens dead and hundreds injured.
Tornadoes produce extremely fast winds can can badly damage or destroy man made structures. Depending on the tornado, the strongest winds occur either at the outer edge of the core or within smaller vortices that develop inside the tornado.