Tornadoes have very powerful winds that carry a great amount of force. The strongest tornadoes can have winds well over 200 mph, which very few structures can withstand. When tornadoes destroy structures, pieces of them can become flying debris, which adds to the damage.
It depends on the tornado and where it hits, though typically damage will not exceed more than a few thousand dollars worth. Sometimes a tornado will stay an an open field and cause no damage at all.
by their windspeed
Yes a tornado can cause property damage ranging from minor roof damage and loss of gutters and siding to complete destruction of well-constructed buildings.
There are two basic ways in which tornadoes cause damage. First, the wind in a tornado carries an enormous amount of force, which can damage tor destroy structures and vegetation. Second, debris carried by a tornado can cause significant damage on impact.
It depends. A tornado can cause property damage in a matter of seconds, but in a large, slow moving tornado, structures can be exposed to damging winds for several minutes. A very violent tornado can completely obliterate a well built house in under 3 seconds.
When a tornado touches down it means it has reached the ground and can now cause damage. It is not a tornado until this occurs,
Simple predicate italicized, complex predicate in bold.The center of a tornado can cause a great deal of damage.
Light damage is the descriptor for an F0 tornado. However stronger tornadoes will also cause light damage in areas that they do not hit head on.
Yes. Although isolated tornadoes usually don't get very high intensity ratings, even the weakest category of tornado, EF0, can cause damage.
The center of a tornado.
The cost of damage from the Joplin tornado amounted to $2.8 billion.
Generally the stronger the tornado, the more severe the damage it causes. A large tornado can affect a larger area than a small tornado and therefore cause a greater quantity of damage, though it is not necessarily more severe.