Countless people have survived tornadoes. Thousands survived tornadoes in 2011 alone. In almost all cases more people will survive a tornado that be killed by it.
Some notable survivors of tornadoes include Matt Suter, who was carried 1300 feet by a tornado in Missouri in 2006, the farthest a person has been carried by a tornado and survived. Rock legend Elvis Presley, at the time only a toddler, survived the Tupelo, Mississippi tornado of 1936, the 4th deadliest tornado in U.S. history. A young Thomas P. Grazulis survived the Worcester, Massachusetts tornado of 1953, the 20th deadliest in the U.S. He would grow up to be one of the foremost experts on historic tornadoes.
The are probably millions of people who have survived tornadoes. While it may seem surprising, the vast majority of people who are affected by tornadoes survive.
Yes, People have survived inside the funnel of a tornado, especially in weaker tornadoes.
Yes. Quite a few people have survived tornadoes.
Yes. If you look at the statistics, the majority of people affected by a tornado will survive without serious injury.
Too many to count. In most tornadoes more lives are spared than taken.
Yes. There have been a few accounts from those who have been inside tornadoes and survived. In recent years two teams of storm chasers have modified SUV's to go inside of tornadoes and both teams have made several successful intercepts. These vehicles are the Tornado Intercept Vehicle (TIV) and the Dominator.
There were many tornadoes in 1925, but you are most likely referring to the infamous Tri-State tornado. The number of survivors is not known, as we do not know how many people were in the path. The number is likely in the thousands or tens of thousands. At least 2,000 survived with injuries.
I survived the Chesterton tornado!!!
People have died from tornadoes in many cities.
They can't. People cannot prevent tornadoes.
No. Tornadoes occur naturally.
From 2000 to today in Italy 9 people died from tornadoes. From the 1800 about 650 people died due to tornadoes