Typical tornado damage includes snapped trees, material peeled from roofs, and some weak structures badly damaged.
Typical damage from an intense tornado includes large numbers of trees snapped or uprooted, houses partially or completely destroyed, and weak structures completely torn apart or blown away.
Subvortices are smaller vortices, almost like mini tornadoes, within the main vortex of a tornado. These subvortices have stronger winds than the main vortex, and result in a tornado with a continuous damage path with intermittent areas of more severe damage.
The main cause of damage from a tornado is the extreme wind speed and debris carried by the tornado. The high winds can destroy buildings, uproot trees, and toss objects with great force, causing widespread destruction in its path.
The damage severity in a tornado is determined primarily by wind speed. For example, a tornado with peak winds of 100 mph, even if it is very large, is not going to obliterate well built houses, thought it will cause severe roof damage. By contrast, even a relatively small tornado with peak winds of 250 mph can completely destroy just about any structure.
it depends on the tornado damage
The longest tornado damage path on record is 219 miles.
Most damage in a tornado is caused by the extremely fast winds.
Unfortunately there is no way to prevent tornado damage, but it can be reduced with improved building standards.
The Joplin tornado of 2011 was a Multiple-vortex tornado. Inside the main circulation were smaller vortices that packed stronger winds than the rest of the tornado. These subvortices are what caused the most severe damage.
Tornadoes cause major property damage and often kill and injure people. The main concerns regarding tornadoes are these effects and warning people when a tornado is coming.
Sort of. Some tornadoes have smaller vorticies inside them that cause swaths of more severe damage within the main damage path. However, a tornado such as this is still considered one tornado.
The greatest amount of damage in a tornado is caused by extremely strong winds. Additional damage is from flying debris.
The cost of damage from the Manchester, South Dakota tornado of 2003 was $3 million.