The widest tornado on record was 2.6 miles wide.
It varies. The average tornado is 50 yards wind, but some are under 10 yards wide. Very large tornadoes can be up to a mile wide or more at the ground. The widest tornado ever recorded was 2.6 miles wide.
The path of a tornado is usually less than a mile wide, with most tornadoes ranging from 50 to 100 yards wide. However, some very large tornadoes are over a mile wide, and a handful of tornadoes have had paths over 2 miles wide.
The average tornado is 50 yards (45 meters) wide.
Thus Tuscaloosa-Birmingham tornado of 2011 varied in width, but at its maximum the tornado was about a mile and a half wide.
It appears to have been one tornado.
How many people killed
It is not known. The Valletta tornado ocurred in the 1550s, long before accurate records were kept. Give the extremely high death toll, it was likely an F4 or F5, but this is a measure of intensity, not size.
The average tornado is 50 yards (45 meters) wide.
The largest tornado ever recorded was 2.6 miles wide.
The Waco tornado of 1953 was about one third of a mile wide.
The El Reno tornado was approximately 2.6 miles wide.
Scientists believe that in extreme cases a tornado can get up to about 2.5 miles wide
The Flint, Michigan tornado of June 18, 1953 was about half a mile wide.
The El Reno tornado was approximately 2.6 miles wide when it struck.
The widest tornado on record was 2.6 miles wide.
Valletta was created in 1566.