There are no exact boundaries to Tornado Alley, but it appears that at least the western half of Iowa is in it, though all of Iowa is prone to tornadoes. This western portion would include the cities of Estherville, Algona, Plymouth, Cherokee, Sioux City, Fort Dodge, Webster City, Carroll, Boone, Ames, Perry, Des Moines, Newton, Atlantic, Red Oak, and Creston as well as smaller communities not listed.
Yes, it is.
Tornado Alley is on the Great Plains, extendig from Texas to South Dakota and Iowa.
Tornado Alley includes Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, and Iowa.
Most U.S. tornadoes occur in Tornado Alley, which stratches from Texas to Iowa.
No. It would be better to say that Kansas is in Tornado Alley. Tornado Alley extends from northern Texas to Iowa.
Tornado Alley did not happen. It is a place, not an event. It is a region that stretches across the Great Plains in the United States from Texas to Iowa.
no. it is WAY too far away to be in tornado alley. nice try though!
Yes. Although it is not in Tornado Alley, Indiana gets its fair share of tornadoes.
Tornado Alley includes large portions of Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota and Iowa with smaller portions of Colorado and Missouri.
Tornado Alley is locate mainly on the Great Plains and extends from Texas to South Dakota and into Iowa. The most active part of Tornado Alley is in northern Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas.
Tornado Alley has never been strictly defined. But generally, it runs from east central Texas north to Iowa, including parts of Colorado and Missouri.
Tornado Alley is not precisely defined, but is generally considered to stretch from northern Texas northward into South Dakota and Iowa and includes large portions of Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska.