It varies. Most tornadoes don't kill anyone. Among those that do kill, the average death toll is 2 or 3. Occasionally a single tornado may kill dozens of people. For a few tornadoes the death toll has gone well into the hundreds.
There was a deadly F4 tornado that likely hit the Auburndale area on April 4, 1966.
The most deadly tornado in 2007 occurred on February 18 in central Florida, specifically in the region of Lake County, Florida. It was a part of a larger outbreak of severe weather that caused widespread damage and claimed a total of 21 lives.
Violent Destructive Dangerous Deadly Unpredictable
It is not possible to stand in the middle of a tornado. The winds would be too strong to even get there. People have been know to be picked up by a tornado and thrown several miles away without being killed.
The deadliest tornado in U.S. history was the Tri-State Tornado, which occurred on March 18, 1925. The tornado tore through Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana, killing 695 people and causing extensive damage along its 219-mile path. It remains the deadliest tornado in recorded history worldwide.
There was a deadly F4 tornado that likely hit the Auburndale area on April 4, 1966.
To date, nobody in the history of California has been killed by a tornado.
It destroys everything in its path. Besides, anything debris the tornado picks up is a deadly missile.
March 18, 1925.
Yes, easily. Even if the tornado isn't very strong deadly debris can enter a classroom through the windows.
The deadliest tornado in this tornado season (2011) hit Joplin, Missouri on May 22, killing 158 people. The last deadly tornado this year hit Springfield, Massachusetts on June 1, killing 3.
No. Tornadoes are not terribly uncommon in China, but news of them is not often reported in Western countries such as the United States. The extremely deadly tornado of June 23, 2016 was not even China's deadliest tornado.
No. In fact no tornadoes are confirmed at all on February 20, 1999.
In terms of intensity level, F5 tornadoes are generally the deadliest.
Yes. Kansas is very prone to tornadoes, some of which are deadly and very destructive.
They aren't. Apart from the extremely deadly 2011 tornado season, annual tornado death tolls in the U.S. have actually been decreasing due to improved warning systems. However, some warn that tornado fatalities could rise as populated areas grow, giving tornadoes more targets in which deaths may occur.
on march 18 1925 when the tri state tornado rampaged Missouri Illinois and Indiana killing 695 people and injured thousands and it is the third costliest tornado in modern history today but was costliest tornado in history until the Omaha tornado of 1975