There is no official boundary to Tornado Alley and answers will vary on this topic. States commonly included, however are Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, and Iowas, as well as small parts of Colorado and Missouri.
No. Illinois is usually not considered part of Tornado Alley.
No. Arkansas is not in tornado alley. However tornadoes are still relatively common there.
Yes. Rockdale, Texas is in the southern par of Tornado Alley.
The Great Plains of the United States are sometimes called Tornado Alley.
The western portion of Missouri is in Tornado Alley.
Because it doesn't get as many tornadoes as tornado alley.
Both Oklahoma and Missouri suffered very destructive tornadoes in 2011. Missouri was hit the hardest because of the Joplin tornado but that state is not entirely in Tornado Alley. Overall, the worst tornado damage in 2011 was in Alabama, but that state is several hundred miles from Tornado Alley.
Tornado Alley is not an event that occurs , it is an area of land in the United States which receives a large number of tornadoes on an annual basis. Although there is no real agreement on the exact extents of Tornado Alley, many maps show it covering most of Kansas and part of northwestern Missouri. Although Tennessee gets tornadoes it is not considered part of Tornado Alley.
Tornado Alley includes large portions of Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota and Iowa with smaller portions of Colorado and Missouri.
No. Missouri gets tornadoes quite often as it is on the edge of Tornado Alley.
Tornado Alley is not officially defined by specific geographical boundaries but generally includes parts of the central United States, spanning from parts of Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, and into portions of Iowa, Missouri, and Illinois. This region is known for its frequent tornado activity due to the clash of warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico meeting cool, dry air from the Rocky Mountains.
Alley
No. While Ontario does get tornadoes, it is nowhere near Tornado Alley. Tornado Alley is farther west.
Yes. Tornado Alley is in the south of the U.S.A.
Tornado Alley does not have official boundaries. Depending on how the map is drawn Leander could be considered just inside or just outside Tornado Alley.
The National Weather Service does not clearly define Tornado Alley, but it almost always includes the Texas Panhandle, the Eastern Plains of Colorado, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, Eastern South Dakota, and western Missouri.