That depends on what you mean by "mini tornado" as it has no real definition. If you mean small, weak tornadoes, then yes. Even in areas prone to large tornadoes, the smaller ones will still be in the majority. However, weak tornadoes are rarely heavily covered unless they strike in places not not normally associated with tornadoes.
Generally, small tornadoes do less damage than large ones, but some small tornadoes have been very destructive.
Big Bang Mini happened in 2009.
Tornadoes can vary in size, with most being between 100 to 600 meters wide. However, there have been larger ones that exceed 2 km in diameter and smaller ones known as rope tornadoes that are thin and narrow.
The tributary is the you can say mini thin rivers join the big ones
If they were little they wouldn't be tornadoes
Big tornadoes are usually strong, but not always. A large, poorly organized tornado is not likely to be very strong. Some tornadoes even weaken as they expand.
mostly in Texas there are the big ones such as f4 and f5's and the surrounding states such as Louisiana Oklahoma Alabama they get like f3's and lower believe it or not but Alaska does get tornadoes but very rarely. Though as is true of any location, most tornadoes are rated F0 or F1.
Technically yes, but only because there are more small cities for tornadoes to hit.
Most tornadoes are 50 to 100 yards wide.
Usually, but not always. Large tornadoes are usually more intense than strong ones. Many EF3 and stronger tornadoes are a quarter mile wide or more, but it is unusual to see EF0 and EF1 tornadoes that large. Regardless of strength a large tornado is likely to cause more damage simply because it covers a larger area.
Big Bang Mini was created on 2009-01-21.
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