The widest tornado ever recorded was 2.5 miles wide.
Very strong tornadoes can reach heights in the rang of 20,000 feet.
Tornadoes can vary greatly in size, with most being around 100-600m wide and staying on the ground for a few minutes to an hour. The largest tornadoes, known as "wedge" tornadoes, can be over 1 mile wide and stay on the ground for an extended period of time.
Yes. Tornadoes can go up and down hills largely unhindered.
There is no given size. Most are fairly small (in weather terms) ranging between 50 and 200 yards wide. However occasionally these tornadoes can grow to over a mile wide with some exceeding 2 miles.
Tornadoes generally form on flat terrain, but they can move up or down elevation changes such as hills. However, tornadoes are more likely to dissipate or weaken as they move over higher elevations due to friction and other factors that disrupt their circulation.
Yes. Some tornadoes may last for more than an hour, but such cases are rare. Most tornadoes do not last more than 10 minutes.
It depends on what exactly you consider big. The average tornado is about 50 yards (45 meters) wide and several thousand feet tall. Very small tornadoes, though may be under 10 yards wide, though must still extend from ground to cloud base (usually at least 1000 feet or 300m up). The largest tornadoes can be over a mile (1.6km) wide and up to 20,000 feet (6000m) tall.
it can get up to two and a half miles wide
A tornado that stays on the ground for about 2 miles is common. The average path length is about 5 miles. However, a mile wide tornado is rare. The vast majority of tornadoes are well under a mile wide.
Tornadoes can vary greatly in size, with most being around 100-600m wide and staying on the ground for a few minutes to an hour. The largest tornadoes, known as "wedge" tornadoes, can be over 1 mile wide and stay on the ground for an extended period of time.
It gets almost as big as 1 and a half foot tall and 7 inches wide.
Very powerful tornadoes are often about 20,000 feet tall.
The largest tornado on record was 4.2 kilometers or 4,200 meters wide. Most tornadoes, though are in the range of 50 to 100 meters wide.
A train locomotive can get up to 6 ft wide from side to side and be around 11 ft tall.
Tornadoes are generally 5 to 10 miles tall, which is 316,800 to 633,600 inches. Most tornadoes are 250 feet (10,000 in) across, but can reach up to two miles (126,720 in) in width.
The average tornado is 150 feet wide. Some, can be less than 30 feet wide however, and the very largest can be up to two and a half miles wide.
Yes. Tornadoes can go up and down hills largely unhindered.
it is 6,962 miles up