All cities in Oklahoma are in Tornado Alley. Oklahoma City is in the most intense part of it.
No. While Ontario does get tornadoes, it is nowhere near Tornado Alley. Tornado Alley is farther west.
Oklahoma City.
Oklahoma City in Oklahoma is often hit by tornadoes because it is centrally located within Tornado Alley, a region in the central United States known for frequent tornado activity. The city's geographical location and topography make it particularly susceptible to severe weather events.
Eastern Colorado near the Oklahoma state line sees relatively high tornado activity and is considered part of tornado alley.
Yes. Arkansas is very near Tornado Alley and gets tornadoes fairly frequently.
That state would be Texas - although the parts of the state that get hurricanes and the part that is in tornado alley are rather far apart. The Gulf coast gets hurricanes. Tornado alley stretches down into the upper part of Texas near Oklahoma. Fortunately the two areas are hundreds of miles apart. Unfortunately hurricanes have been known to spawn some tornadoes so that even areas that are not part of tornado alley may get tornadoes in connection with a hurricane.
it is in California and kansas near tornado valley
Tornadoes have occurred in all 50 states. However. Most tornadoes happen in or near the area known as tornado alley, which extends north from Texas to South Dakota and includes parts of some adjacent states.
As of 12:30 EDT on March 18, 2013 Spring City, Tennessee is not under a tornado watch. It is, however under a severe thunderstorm watch. A tornado warning has been issued near Lewisburg, though that is some distance from Spring City.
A satellite tornado is a tornado that touches down near and usually orbits a larger tornado within the same mesocyclone.
Tornadoes are not formally named, hurricanes are. However, many tornadoes are named for where they hit or towns they go near. Though sometimes this leads to one tornado being called by multiple names. For example one infamous tornado that occurred on May 3, 1999 is often called the Oklahoma City tornado, the Moore, Oklahoma tornado, and the Bridgecreek-Moore tornado.
Don't go near windows.