Fallen debris and damaged or destroyed structures and vegetation.
That depends on where you are relative to the tornado. Most tornadoes travel in an easterly direction, so if you are watichng a tornado and are south of it, it will move to your right, and if you are north of it, it will move to your left.
it was the tornado
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The earthquake left the whole town in a shambles. The tornado left the entire neighborhood in a shambles.
When you are prepared for a tornado it gives you a chance to get to safety before it hits, increasing your chances of survival. You may also want to have an emergency kit in the case that you home is left without power, left uninhabitable, or destroyed.
That would most likely be the tornado that struck the cities of Daulatpur and Saturia in central Bangladesh on April 26, 1989. It was the deadliest tornado in history with an estimated 1300 deaths and 80,000 left homeless.
The tornado left a wide swath of destruction.
In a single-vortex tornado the fastest winds are found at the outer edge of the core, generally on the tornado's right side in the northern hemisphere and the left side in the southern. In a multiple-vortex tornado the fastest winds are found in the subvortices within the main circulation.
Indirectly, yes. A "fire tornado," more properly called a firewhirl is not a true tornado and in terms of wind speed is only equivalent to an EF1 tornado. However, firewhirls act to spread fires, which can burn down entire neighborhoods if left unchecked.
Yes. There is no shortage of examples. Perhaps the mos infamous is the Tri-State tornado of 1925, which left nearly 700 people dead.
7.
No. A tornado is a localized event, usually not affecting more than a town or two. A tornado may lead to people leaving a town, or sometimes a tornado-prone region, but not usually a country. For example, many people left the small town of Greensburg, Kansas after most of it was destroyed by a tornado in 2007, but they all stayed in the United States.