The Xenia, Ohio tornado of 1974 never actually had its wind speed measured as we did not have the necessary technology at the time. However, based on damage the tornado was rated F5, the highest category on the Fujita scale, which would put estimated winds in the range of 261-318 mph. Even considering the fact that this scale overestimated wind speed, that would still put the Xenia tornado's wind speed at well over 200 mph.
The strong wind in a tornado is the source of its destructive potential.
it depends on how strong the tornado is the stronger it is the bigger it will be
By how strong the tornado is. Even though strong tornadoes tend to be larger how strong a tornado is does not determine its size. Relatively weak tornadoes have been very large and extremely strong tornadoes have been relatively small.
That depends on the tornado. In the very weakest tornadoes it would be possible to stand with some difficult inside the tornado itself. In a strong enough tornado the winds may be strong enough to pull you in from as much as 200 yards away, perhaps more.
The Xenia tornado of 1974 was about half a mile wide.
The Xenia, Ohio tornado of 1974 killed 32 people directly. Two others died from indirect effects of the tornado.
The Xenia tornado was a large and very powerful F5 tornado that struck the town of Xenia, Ohio on April 3, 1974 killing 34 people. It was the worst tornado of the Super Outbreak, which was until recently the largest single day tornado outbreak on record, with 148 tornadoes touching down in 15 hours.
33
Of the 34 people killed in the Xenia tornado of 1974 nine to eleven were children depending on what age you consider childhood to end. The two oldest victims of these eleven were 14 and 16 years old.
the Xenia Ohio was an F5 tornado being part of the super outbreak on April 3-4 1974 so it was incredible damage
The Xenia, Ohio tornado of 1974 never actually had its wind speed measured as we did not have the necessary technology at the time. However, based on damage the tornado was rated F5, the highest category on the Fujita scale, which would put estimated winds in the range of 261-318 mph. Even considering the fact that this scale overestimated wind speed, that would still put the Xenia tornado's wind speed at well over 200 mph.
Tornadoes are not given names as hurricanes are. Some are referred to by the places, they hit such as the Joplin, Missouri tornado, or the Xenia, Ohio tornado.
Given the extent of the damage and the number of people killed, it is almost certain that pets were killed in the Xenia tornado. However, animal deaths are not usually noted in records apart from substantial losses of livestock.
The strong wind in a tornado is the source of its destructive potential.
It depends on how strong the tornado is. If its a weak tornado then most likely it can not, but if it's a very strong tornado it is very possible that it can.
The most destructive tornado in Ohio history was the Xenia tornado of April 3, 1974. This F5 tornado killed 34 people and caused $439 million in property damage (in 2011 U.S. dollars).