The government has granted millions in money to rebuild and emergency workers from across the country are searching for trapped and injured people.
Tornadoes are most common in a region called Tornado Alley, which stretches roughly from Texas to South Dakota and Iowa.
Moreso the central plains. While the Deep South is a major region for tornadoes, it is the Great Plains that have earned the name "Tornado Alley".
South America - 2010 was released on: USA: 22 April 2010 (Ann Arbor, Michigan)
The island of Aruba lies north of Venezuela, which is in South America. With that being said the answer is no, it's north of South America. Aruba is governed by the Netherlands.
South America is a proper noun due to it being the name of a place.
Yes. Tornado Alley is in the south of the U.S.A.
When the peak tornado activity occurs varies from one year to the next, but it normally falls in April, May, or June, with May being the most active month on average. Different regions also experience different peaks. Major outbreaks in the South are more common in April and even March while in the northern states, tornadoes are more common in June.
Technically Tornado Alley is a term reserved for a specific region in the central U.S. However the are regions not entirely unlike Tornado Alley on other continents, including one in Argentina (South America) another in Asia covering parts of India and Bangladesh, and a third ins South Africa.
If you mean the rating, the Manchester, South Dakota tornado was an F4.
Brazil is in south America, thousands of miles from Europe.
Tornado Alley did not "hit" South Dakota because it is not an event. It is a place that some include South Dakota as a part of.
If you mean the tornado that struck McConnel Air Force bas on April 26, 1991, that tornado first form south of the town of Clearwater, Kansas and moved northeast to the Air Force base. After striking the base the tornado continued traveling northeast, intensifying as it did so, eventually moving through Andover at peak intensity as an F5 tornado.