The Regina, Saskatchewan tornado (popularly called the Regina Cyclone) of June 30, 1912 is the deadliest Canadian. It killed 28 people.
Yes, in fact Canada's deadliest tornado (commonly called the Regina Cyclone) was in Saskatchewan.
No. Cyclones and tornadoes are completely different phenomena.
28 people were killed in the Regina Tornado in 1912.
This most closely describes a tornado, though a tornado technically is not a cyclone.
A tornado is also commonly known as a cyclone.
No. While a tornado and a cyclone have a number of things in common, they are two different things. A tornado is a small-scale circulation that is dependent on a parent storm cell. A cyclone is a large-scale circulation that is its own independent weather system.
There is no such thing as a "cyclone 5 tornado." You can have a category 5 hurricane or an EF5 tornado. In either case, the answer would be no; there is too much turbulence.
cyclone, tornado, monsoon
No. A hurricane is a type of cyclone, but a tornado is not. A cyclone is a large-scale weather system. A tornado is a small-scale circulation.
There was never a tornado named Tracy as tornadoes are not given names. Cyclone Tracy lasted from December 21-26, 1974, making landfall early on December 25. Cyclone Tracy was a tropical cyclone, which is essentially a hurricane, not a tornado
A tornado and a cyclone cannot collide as they work on entirely different orders of magnitude. A cyclone is is its own large-scale self-sustaining weather system. A tornado is a small-scale vortex that is part of a parent thunderstorm, which is itself usually part of a larger storm system. Most tornadoes form from storms that develop along the fronts connected to a mid-latitude cyclone, and some are produced in theouter storm bands of tropical cyclones. When two cyclones collide, they merge into one.