Tornadoes are not given names as hurricanes are, but are often referred to by where they hit. So it would be called the Auckland tornado.
The tornado (or more properly, waterspout) was not given a name as tornadoes are not named.
The first tornado of 2006 did not have a specific name assigned to it. Tornadoes are usually identified by the location and date of occurrence rather than being given individual names.
Not in the sense that hurricanes are. Instead they are simply referred to by the places they hit, for example the Joplin, Missouri tornado or the Andover, Kansas tornado.
No. No tornado has a name. Every hurricane, gets a name , though, with the exception of one hurricane in 1991 which was simply called "the Perfect Storm."
The scientific name for tornadoes is "tornado." Tornado is the widely accepted term used by meteorologists and scientists to describe a rapidly rotating column of air that extends from a thunderstorm to the ground.
3.15pm NZST
No. Tornadoes are not given names.
A tornado in the U.S. is simply called a tornado. They do not get individual names as hurricanes do.
The tornado (or more properly, waterspout) was not given a name as tornadoes are not named.
Tornadoes are not given official names. They are sometimes given informal names for where they hit.
Tornado Alley
Albany
Aukland, New Zealand was hit by an F2 tornado on December 6, 2012 that killed 3 people.
Tornadoes are not given names as hurricanes are. The most damaging tornado recorded so far was the Topeka, Kansas tornado of 1966.
tornado alley
It is simply called the Waco, Texas tornado. Tornadoes are not given names like hurricanes are.
Albany, North Shore