The average tornado has a path length of 2 to 3 miles.
The average tornado damage path is about 50 yards wide and 5 miles long.
The path length of the Joplin, Missouri tornado (how far it traveled) was 22.1 miles. The path width of the tornado (the maximum diameter of the tornado) was just under 1 mile. It lasted for 38 minutes.
The average tornado damage path is 5 miles. But they can be much longer or shorter. The longest recorded damage path was 219 miles. The shortest was 7 feet.
Tornado lengths can vary significantly, typically ranging from a few hundred feet to over a mile. The duration of a tornado's path can last anywhere from a few seconds to several hours, depending on its size and intensity.
The average width of a tornado is about 100 to 200 feet, but they can vary in size from a few feet to over a mile wide. The average length of a tornado's path is around 6 miles, but they can travel much farther distances under certain conditions.
The known path length of the Goliad tornado was about 15 miles. The path may have been longer, though, as little is known about what the tornado did prior to hitting Goliad.
The average tornado is on the ground for about 5 miles, but path lengths can vary greatly. Some tornadoes may be on the ground for only a few hundred feet while others may travel over 100 or even 200 miles. The longest damage path on record is 219 miles.
Tornadoes can destroy as much houses as it can depending on the length of their path. Most tornadoes are too weak to destroy houses, causing mostly superficial damage. However, in the works cases a tornado can destroy thousands of houses.
The Delhi, Louisiana tornado of 1971 had an average path width of 600 yards and is officially listed with a path length of 110 miles. However, some experts believe that the path was not this long. Some evidence suggests that the 110-mile track is not that of a single tornado, but of two tornadoes, with the second one forming as the first dissipated.
The shortest path of a tornado can be just a few feet, or it may skip along for miles without causing significant damage. Tornado paths can vary greatly in length depending on the storm's intensity and environmental conditions.
The average tornado path is about 5 miles long, but it can range from as little as a few hundred feet to over 200 miles.
The tornado is reported to have had a path length of 27 miles and an average forward speed of 35 mph, which works out to a duration of 46 minutes.