As of July 25, tornadoes in the US have killed 10 people in 2015.
Tornadoes killed 30 people in the U.S. in 1995. It is unknown how many, if any, were killed by tornadoes in the rest of the world.
Tornadoes kill 60-80 people in an average year.
In an average year 60 people are killed by tornadoes and 1500 are injured in some way.
On average tornadoes kill 60 people each year in the U.S.
Nearly 41 million people are killed in tornadoes per year.
Tornadoes don't kill people every day. On average about 80 people are killed by tornadoes each year.
In 2012, 13 people were killed in 2 tornadoes in Indiana.
Assuming you mean people killed by tornadoes in Tornado Alley, the years 1981-2010 show an average of 14 deaths per year from tornadoes. Nationwide tornadoes killed and average of 56 people per year in the same period.
As of July 2016, tornadoes have killed 1,054 people in the U.S. in the past 10 years. More than half of those deaths occurred in 2011, which was an exceptionally violent year for tornadoes.
Yes, Tornadoes kill dozens of people every year. In the U.S. alone tornadoes killed 553 people in 2011 (making it the 2nd deadliest year on record for the U.S.), and 70 in 2012. Elsewhere in the world tornadoes killed about 2 dozen people in the same time period.
In 2011 tornadoes killed 570 people, 553 in the U.S.
Since official records began in 1950 tornadoes have killed 162 people in Florida. The deadliest tornado to strike Florida was an F3 that killed 25 people in and near Kissimmee on February 22, 1998.