After the first national system of weather radars was implemented in the U.S. tornadoes claimed an average of 82 American lives per year. After the upgrade to Doppler radar in 1991 that average holds at 80. However, this data is skewed by the extremely deadly 2011 tornado season which claimed 553 lives. If we exclude that outlier, the average is lowered to 57 deaths per year.
Prior to the creation of weather radar tornadoes claimed an averaged of about 190 lives every year in the United States.
People have died from tornadoes in many cities.
Tornadoes don't kill people every day. On average about 80 people are killed by tornadoes each year.
Tornadoes in the U.S. kill about 60 people each year on average.
some people die of tornadoes because if they are outside the tornado can pick them up and throw them down so hard they can die.
Yes. Occasionally there are killer tornadoes in Mexico.
On average tornadoes kill more people than lightning
Most people who die in tornadoes are hit by flying or falling debris, or are killed by collapsing walls and ceilings.
Probably not. Although tornadoes do kill people, most people who are impacted by tornadoes survive.
It would depend on the severity of the tornado.
People die, many things get ruined, and land gets messed up.
Tornadoes can easily kill, but most of the people affected by tornadoes survive.