Tornado Alley does not have exact boundaries. Some maps include North Dakota, or parts of it, in Tornado Alley while others do not.
Northern Texas is part of tornado alley. But this region actually extends as far north as South Dakota.
There is no set agreement on the extent of Tornado Alley, but it is generally considered to include Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, and Iowa as well as small portions of Colorado and Missouri.
Oklahoma would be the one most likely to have a tornado. However, all of these states have had tornadoes, and North Dakota is fairly tornado prone.
Is this your Homework?? Basically its because Texas is Part of tornado ally. Tornado Ally is a place in the US that because of all of the different weather that is near it gets a ton of tornadoes. Tornado ally consists of Oklahoma Kansas Nebraska South Dakota and Mexico (getting a sense of where it is?)
Tornado Alley is a swath through the middle of the U.S, from Texas up through North Dakota.
Yes,. There was an F3 tornado in the Fargo area on August 30, 1956.
As of May 6, 2015 the last known tornado in North Dakota was an EF0 southwest of Valley City on September 4, 2014. It caused some moderate tree damage.
A blizzard or a tornado would be seen in North Dakota but not very likely in Florida.
no. it is WAY too far away to be in tornado alley. nice try though!
north dakota
Tornado Alley typically stretches from central Texas to North Dakota. It covers parts of the central United States, including states like Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, and South Dakota, where tornadoes are more frequent due to the clash of warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico and cool, dry air from the Rockies.
It has a mix of the two. As is true of any place most tornadoes in North Dakota are weak. But occasionally it does get really bad ones. One of the most notable was the F5 tornado that struck Fargo, North Dakota in 1957. One thing that should be noted is that since North Dakota is rather sparsely populated the tornado there have less opportunity to cause a lot of damage.