It is impossible to account for every plant and tree impacted by the Tri-State tornado, but many plants were likely damaged, broken, or uprooted.
All the states have had tornadoes.
None. All 50 states have had tornadoes.
tornadoes are not like hurricanes they dont get named they only get named by the place where the tornado touch down like for example the hallam nebraska tornado or the tri state tornado
All 50 U.S. states have had tornadoes.
There is no official beginning or end to tornado season, but it is generally considered to end in June. However, tornadoes are not limited to tornado season, it's just a time of higher tornado activity. Strong tornadoes can and have happened at all times of the year.
None. Every state, even Alaska, has had at least a few tornadoes.
Even in weak tornado, trees may lose branches or be uprooted. In stronger tornadoes many trees may be snapped or uprooted while some smaller plants are flattened. Violent tornadoes can rip plants out of the ground and creat swaths of complete deforestation. In the most extreme cases, all vegetation may be removed. Even grass can be scoured from the ground.
It depends what you call a tornado. Most tornado-like clouds do not touch the earth's surface. Some say that until it touches the ground it is not a tornado but a funnel cloud; however the definition of a tornado does not state that it must touch the ground. It all depends on what you're taught.
Oklahoma would be the one most likely to have a tornado. However, all of these states have had tornadoes, and North Dakota is fairly tornado prone.
Yes. All 50 U.S. states have recorded at least a few tornadoes.
Eastern Colorado near the Oklahoma state line sees relatively high tornado activity and is considered part of tornado alley.
Although tornadoes occur in all states, the state with the most tornadoes is Texas.