Hattiesburg
The largest tornado ever recorded was the El Reno, Oklahoma tornado of May 31, 2013. This tornado was 2.6 miles wide. Doppler radar measured a wind gust in the tornado at 296 mph, the second highest wind speed ever recorded in a tornado.
No. The largest tornado ever recorded hit Hallam, Nebraska in the United States.
The largest tornado in Oklahoma (and in fact the largest tornado ever recorded), was the El Reno, Oklahoma tornado of May 31, 2013. It was 2.6 miles wide.
The second largest tornado on record was the Hallam, Nebraska tornado of May 22, 2004. It was 2.5 miles wide.
The largest tornado ever recorded was the Hallam, Nebraska tornado of May 22, 2004. At one point this tornado was 2.5 miles wide.
The widest tornado ever record, the Hallam, Nebraska tornado, killed 1 person. The strongest tornado ever recorded (fastest winds measured), The Moore F5 of May 3, 1999, killed 36 people. The worst (deadliest) tornado ever recorded, the Daulatpur-Salturia in Bangladesh killed over 1,300 people.
No. For one thing, Fujita (F) scale ratings measure the strength of a tornado, not its size. F1 is the second weakest rating a tornado can get (F0 is the weakest). Weak tornadoes such as this are generally small, but occasionally can be large. The highest rating a tornado can get is F5.
Tornadoes have been known to destroy entire towns ans large building complexes.
The largest tornado on record was the El Reno, Oklahoma tornado of May 31, 2013, which was at times 2.6 miles wide. As with any other tornado, it had absolutely nothing to do with the alignment of the stars or their gravity.
No. The highest rating a tornado can receive on the Fujita scale is F5. F4 is the second highest rating. Even then, while very strong tornadoes tend to be large, ratings are not based on size; they are based on the severity of damage the tornado inflicts.
The largest tornado ever recorded, the Hallam, Nebraska tornado, struck in 2004, so about 6 years ago.