Most likely not. Similar objects have been found in trees and telephone poles, but it appears that they were driven into pre-existing cracks rather than solid wood.
The Seymour, Texas, tornado of April 10, 1979 is a prime example of a tornado that is destined to be misjudged on the Fujita Scale. This spectacular funnel was probably capable of F4 damage, had it passed through a town. It produced only telephone pole and tree damage, and thus could be rated no higher than F2 damage. The Seymour tornado was in the same family as the devastatingWichita Falls, Texas tornado, which remains as of this writing, the most damaging in US history. Video of this tornado is used in the Fujita Scale segment of Tornado Video Classics II
Just about anything large enough to fit through the window.
No, a toothpick is much too light to weigh a kilogram. A typical toothpick weighs only a fraction of a gram.
in the bathroom or anywhere away from a window because the strong winds a tornado produces can brake through glass.
If you can see the tornado
Qwest' is the former name of the CenturyLink telephone service company. One could visit the CenturyLink website to obtain residential telephone service through this company.
No, a toothpick is not a part of an electromagnet. An electromagnet is typically made up of a coil of wire wrapped around a core material such as iron, while a toothpick is simply a small stick made of wood or plastic.
Yes. A tornado could be considered an event.
There is nothing you can do to storm a tornado.
No, because not all toothpicks are the same size. However, one single toothpick could be used as long as you always used the same one.
a toothpick
A strong to violent tornado could potentially destroy a portion of it. But the area appears too large to be covered by a tornado.