That damage sounds consistent with an EF3 or possibly a high EF2 tornado.
Port-au-Prince, the capital city of Haiti, was severely affected by the earthquake that struck in 2010. The city experienced widespread destruction, with up to 80% of the buildings damaged or destroyed. The earthquake resulted in the loss of an estimated 230,000 lives and caused significant infrastructure damage, including hospitals, schools, and government buildings.
the get severely damage
A natural disaster cannot be controlled per se. After all, who can control the Earth and its movements? However, the damage they cause can be severely reduced by taking certain precautions, such as earthquake proofing buildings, constructing protective walls along shores to (attempt to) lessen the effect of tsunamis, evacuate people from the vicinity of the natural disaster, etc.
i severely doubt it. honestly, i wouldn't risk it.
severelt stressed
An F1 tornado will severely strip material from the roofs of most buildings. Trailers can be overturned and badly damage and some may be destroyed. Windows can break, garages and porches can collapse and windows can break.
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Structures are severely restrictive terrain, but must be controlled to win the fight.
Typical F1 tornado damage surfaces peeled from roofs, windows broken, garages and porches collapsed, trailers overturned or severely damage, and trees knocked down.
In an area hit by an F0 tornado you are likely to see broken tree limbs and a few downed trees. Roof tiles, vinyl siding, and gutters may be peeled from some structures, but usually not in significant amounts. Fences and unanchored objects may be overturned. Some very weak structures such as sheds may be destroyed. You will see much of the same from an F1 tornado, though with more severe damage in some places. Roofs can be severely damaged and porches collapsed. Structures such as garages and barns may be destroyed. Roofs that are not well secured may be torn off.
Both cities sustained major damage to buildings and utilities. In addition to the direct damage from the atomic blast, thousands of fires resulted. Most buildings were destroyed or severely damaged, and thousands of people died.
The winds of a tornado can severely damage or destroy property. Flying debris, collapsing buildings, and falling trees can cause injury or death.
Earthquake reinforcement makes the structures earthquake-resistant. It strengthens the structures against the effects of ground shaking. Such structures would not collapse during an earthquake but may get damaged severely. Safety of people is important in earthquake-resistant buildings, and the property contained in such structures is safeguarded as the disaster is avoided. Seismic design codes throughout the world adhere to this objective while specifying the earthquake reinforcement factors. When you consider seismic design for a new RCC structure, the reinforcement would be worked out based on the design requirements of the seismic zone in which the building will be constructed. Also, one can retrofit the damaged structures with earthquake reinforcement according to the type of masonry with which they were built. For a complete seismic design tips in a nutshell, please see the related link.
It depends on the intensity of the tornado. Weak tornadoes (EF0 and EF1) can topple trees, destroy sheds and barns, and severely damage or mostly destroy trailers. Stronger structures will sutain mild to moderate damage. Strong tornadoes (EF2 and EF3) will obliterate trailers and many weak structures. Many houses may be mostly destroyed by an EF3. Violent tornadoes (EF4 and EF5) will destroy even the strongest buildings, with an EF5 leaving behind nothing but a bare foundation of most houses.
Estimated wind speed and typical damage for each category: EF0: 65-85 mph. Shingles peeled from roofs, gutters and awnings taken down. Tree limbs broken with some weaker trees toppled. EF1: 86-110 mph. Roofs of houses and other buildings badly damaged. Trailers overturned and/or severely damaged. Windows broken. EF2: 111-135 mph. Roofs torn from well built houses. Trailers completely destroyed. Large trees snapped. EF3: 136-165 mph. Numerous walls collapse in well built houses. Weaker structures may collapse. EF4: 166-200 mph. Well built houses leveled. Trees stripped of bark. Asphalt peeled from poorly maintained roads. EF5: over 200 mph. Houses of superior construction wiped clean off foundations. Topsoil scoured.
Structures of just about every imaginable variety have been destroyed by tornadoes including barns, sheds, warehouses, factories, mobile homes, houses, apartment buildings, hotels, schools, hospitals, strip and shopping malls, restaurants, retail buildings, and just about anything else you could think of.
Severely is an adverb.