The Tri-State tornado of March 18, 1925.
No. Hurricanes are far bigger than tornadoes. The average tornado is 50 yards wide, with the smallest tornado on recorded being only 3 feet wide and the largest ever recorded at 2.6 miles. Hurricanes are 300 miles wide on average, the smallest ever recorded was about 60 miles wide and the largest over 1,300 miles.
The largest tornado ever recorded was 2.5 miles wide. However, most are no more than a few hundred yards wide.
The first recorded tornado struck near Kilbeggan, Ireland in 1054. Available records do not mention if there were any deaths. Keep in mind that most tornadoes do not kill.
Most Tornadoes are weak. There is about a 69% chance that a Tornado will be an F0 or an F1, a 29% chance that a Tornado will be an F2 or an F3, and a 2% chance that a Tornado will be an F4 or an F5.
The fastest forward traveling speed recorded in a tornado was 73 mph in the Tri-State tornado of March 18, 1925. The fastest wind speed ever recorded in a tornado was 302 mph in Moore, Oklahoma F5 tornado of May 3, 1999.
No. The largest tornado ever recorded was 2.5 miles wide, and only a handful of tornadoes over 2 miles wide have ever been recorded. The smallest hurricane ever recorded was 60 miles wide, with most hurricanes being a few hundred miles wide.
The most violent tornado and only F5 tornado recorded in the month of August struck Plainfield, Illinois, southwest of Chicago, on August 28, 1990.
The most destructive tornado in U.S. history was the Joplin, Missouri tornado of May 22, 2011. The cost of damage was $2.8 billion.
Both. Most of the death and destruction occur during a tornado, but recovery from a particularly devastating tornado can take months or years.
In terms of the monetary cost of damage, the most destructive tornado on record was the one that struck Joplin, Missouri on May 22, 2011, costing $2.8 billion.
Tuscaloosa, Alabama has been hit by a number of tornadoes, but the most recent and most devastating tornado to hit the city was the EF4 that struck on April 27, 2011.
Tornadoes are not given names as hurricanes are. The most damaging tornado recorded so far was the Topeka, Kansas tornado of 1966.
The Daulatpur-Saturia tornado of Bangladesh is the deadliest tornado in world history, with a death toll of about 1,300.
because 148 tornadoes touchdown in less than 24 hours, making it the most intense tornado outbreak ever recorded.
The largest tornado even recorded caused about $160 million dollars in damage, but keep in mind this wasn't the most damaging tornado or the strongest. The tornado with the strongest recorded winds caused $1 billion in damage (about $1.3 billion in today's dollars). The most damaging tornado recorded caused the equivalent of $1.7 billion in today's dollars.
No. Hurricanes are far bigger than tornadoes. The average tornado is 50 yards wide, with the smallest tornado on recorded being only 3 feet wide and the largest ever recorded at 2.6 miles. Hurricanes are 300 miles wide on average, the smallest ever recorded was about 60 miles wide and the largest over 1,300 miles.
The most devastating tornadoes are usually the ones rated F5 or EF5. Tornadoes of this intensity have been known to obliterate entire neighborhoods and kill dozens. Examples of especially devastating tornadoes of such intensity include the Moore, Oklahoma tornado of 1999 which killed 36; the Hackleburg, Alabama of 2011 which killed 72; and the Joplin, Missouri tornado of 2011 which killed 158. Occasionally an F4 or EF4 tornado makes it onto the list as well, such as the Wichita Falls, Texas tornado of 1979 which killed 42, and the Tuscaloosa, Alabama tornado of 2011, which killed 64.