There are two movies that feature cows flying in tornadoes. A flying cow briefly appears during the tornado in the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz. Another well known flying cow appears in the 1996 film Twister.
Not under the circumstance depicted because there will be flying debris in the tornado moving at high speeds. However, if you take adequate shelter, underground if possible, you can survive especially considering that only a fairly small portion of an F5 tornado actually produce F5-force winds.
Somewhere over the rainbow is where bluebirds fly. In a bit of foreshadowing, Dorothy Gale sings 'Over the Rainbow' in the beloved 1939 film version of 'The Wizard of Oz'. One of the lines asks why she can't do the same as bluebirds, and fly over the rainbow. Her question gets answered, with the tornado that takes her from Kansas, over the rainbow, and into the beautiful, enchanted, magical lands of Oz.
Cows
Its 'Butterfly Fly Away' if your talking about the one under the porch thing on the hill hope this helps
At least 40. Some of the better known: "The Wizard of Oz" (1939) "Places in the Heart" (1984) "Twister" (1996) "Where the Heart Is" (2000) "The Day After Tomorrow" (2004)
Alley
A strong tornado is one that is EF2 or stronger. A violent tornado is one that is EF4 or EF5.
The first one
That depends on what you mean by "mini tornado," as there is no real definition for the term. Some people apply the term to whirlwinds such as dust devils, which aren't really tornadoes. In that case, then no. Sometimes, especially outside of the U.S. tornadoes with relatively narrow damage paths are referred to as "mini tornadoes," regardless of intensity. In that case, such a tornado may be able to lift up a cow depending on how intense it is. One tornado in France in 2008, which some outlets called a "mini tornado" caused isolated F4 damage. Such a tornado could pick up cows and much larger objects.
If two tornadoes meet, they will merge to form one tornado.
The last tornado to hit Seattle was in 1971.
It appears to have been one tornado.
Yes. In some cases a large, strong tornado will produce what is called a satellite tornado, which circles the main one.
one liter of cows milk weights one kilogram
Yes. After an area has been hit by a tornado the odds of a tornado striking it in the future are the same as they were before. One notable case is the town of Harvest, Alabama. On April 3, 1974 it was struck by an F5 tornado, followed by another F5 less than an hour later. Harvest was then struck by an F4 tornado in 1995, an EF5 tornado in 2011, and an EF3 tornado in 2012. The 2012 tornado destroyed homes being rebuilt following the one in 2011.
A tornado affects anyone unfortunate enough to be in the path of one.
Yes, in some instances one tornado may spawn a smaller satellite tornado.