Yes. Kansas is actually part of the most active part of Tornado Alley.
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The deadliest Kansas tornado on record was the Udall, Kansas F5 tornado of May 25, 1955 with 80 deaths.
A tornado in Kansas.
First, it's Greensburg, not Greensboro. That tornado occurred on May 4, 2007.
Yes. On June 21, 1969 an F3 tornado struck Salina, Kansas injuring dozens and causing millions of dollars in damage.
Yes. Florida ranks 4th in tornado activity of all the states after Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas.
The deadliest Kansas tornado on record was the Udall, Kansas F5 tornado of May 25, 1955 with 80 deaths.
The worst tornado to hit Cowley County Kansas was the Udall, Kansas F5 tornado of May 25, 1955. This tornado killed 80 people, making it the deadliest tornado in Kansas history.
There were no tornado related deaths in Kansas in 2000.
A tornado in Kansas.
The probability of a tornado hitting Kansas is 100%. Dozens of tornadoes occur in Kansas every year.
Nearly all tornadoes in Kansas rotate counterclockwise,as it is throughout the northern hemisphere.
Yes. Kentucky is in a tornado forming region known as "Dixie Alley."They are subject to tornadoes but nothing like Oklahoma, the Texas Panhandle and Kansas experience.
No US State is completely free of tornadoes but the core of Tornado Alley is most often considered to be the Texas Panhandle, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, Eastern South Dakota and Eastern Colorado.
The Topeka, Kansas tornado 1966 was an F5.
Kansas. Kansas is one of the most tornado prone states while Rhode Island rarely gets them.
Yes. Kansas can have tornadoes in the winter, though it is rare.
There were 187 tornadoes in Kansas in 2008.