Have you ever thought about what it would be like to be in a tornado or hurricane? I am going to tell you about them, so that might give you an idea. Hurricanes and Tornadoes are both very dangerous storms. They can kill tons of people and do a lot of damage. Hurricanes happen near the equator. Tornadoes usually happen in flat land places. They are both very interesting topics to learn about.
Tornados and hurricanes are often thought of as very similar, even at times identical. Both are destructive and can kill people, yet at the same time there must be a difference, because why would they be called different things if they were the same? Well, although both hurricanes and tornados have many things in common, some may be surprised to know how different they can be.
If you have never seen a tornado or hurricane, one day you might. Tornadoes and hurricanes are severe storm systems that can devastate communities, towns, and cities. Storms such as these are very dangerous and should not be taken lightly. Tornadoes and hurricanes have several similarities as well as differences. These similarities and differences can be seen in their appearance, casualties, and costs and damages of the storms.
Hurricanes and tornadoes are both severe weather events that can potentially cause a great deal of damage to property. Both of these storms can threaten human life and in severe events with either a hurricane of a tornado there may well be a loss of life. They may be quite different in how they form and what they actually do but on the other hand those storms are both potentially devastating so they fall into the same category of potential severe weather danger. People who live in areas where hurricanes and tornadoes are known to appear during certain seasons of the year are always urged to be alert to weather warning systems. Those same residents know from experience to keep their radios tuned to weather emergency stations and they are in many cases prepared for the brunt of a storm by building basement shelters.
Tornadoes and hurricanes are very destructive. Tornadoes are spinning columns of air that form from the the sky to the ground. Hurricanes are the most powerful storms on Earth. Hurricanes are tropical storms that travel across the Atlantic Ocean. Hurricanes happen when winds exceed to 75 miles per hour. Tornadoes have winds that can get to the speed of up to 200-300 miles per hour. There is a level 5 hurricane which means that the winds exceed up to 150 miles per hour.
Whoosh, that was a close one. Theses things are powerful. What just happened was indeed a tornado. Hurricanes and tornadoes have similar characteristics. They both have strong winds, that cause destruction, and happen in certain places mostly.
"Crash" went the roof of the old broken down house onto the flooding ground. Hurricanes and tornadoes can be compared in contrasted in many different ways. According to Spencer Adkins, a meteorologist for Channel 13 News, "During a hurricane there is a monstrous chance that inland flooding is going to happen in flat places. Also, there is 5 rating scales for both. They both have similarities and differences in wind speed, appearance, and their locations that they happen in.
OMG! Look over there! A hurricane! Hurricane and tornadoes have many, many similarities, but they have so many differences also. Hurricanes and tornadoes are similar in the ways that they damage and strike. Tornadoes and hurricanes are distinct in how they form, their wind speeds, and their effects.
A tornado is defined as a violently rotating column extending from a thunderstorm to the ground. The most violent tornadoes are capable of tremendous destruction with wind speeds of two hundred and fifty miles per hour or more. Damage paths can be more than one mile wide and fifty miles long. In an average year, eight hundred tornadoes are reported nationwide, resulting in eighty deaths and over one thousand five hundred injuries. In the body of my essay, I will tell you about types of tornadoes, where tornadoes come from, where and when tornadoes occur, the damage they inflict, variations of tornadoes, and how to detect tornadoes.
Did you know the costliest tornado in United States history is the Joplin tornado which caused $2.8 billion dollars in damage? Tornadoes are a very serious natural disaster some can be done in 10 minutes but some can last for an hour or some can even last for more. Tornadoes can also unfortunately cause deaths and can very well obliterate buildings in seconds (of course depending how strong the building is and depending the kind of building). Tornadoes kill on an average of 60 people each year. Tornadoes can form without many warning (except if you are prepared), the damage it does is costly, but if you are prepared it’s easy to survive a deadly tornado.
A tornado is a violent rotating column of air extending from a thunderstorm to the ground. The most violent tornadoes can produce massive destruction with wind speeds of 250 miles per hour or more. The typical tornado moves from southwest to northeast, but they have been known to move in any direction. The average forward speed of a tornado is 30 miles per hour but it may vary from stationary to 70 miles per hour. Although tornadoes occur in many parts of the world, they are found most frequently in the United States east of the Rocky Mountains during the spring and summer months. In an average year, 800 tornadoes are reported nationwide, resulting in 80 deaths and over 1,500 injuries.
Tornadoes are devastating atmospheric events that affect the ecology and the lives of people in their paths. Tornadoes are defined as “a violently rotating column of air, in contact with the ground, either pendant from a cumuliform cloud or underneath a cumuliform cloud, and often (but not always) visible as a funnel cloud” (Glossary of Meterology, 2011). The Tri-state tornado was the most deadly tornado in the United States. It stayed on the ground for a total of 219 miles through areas of Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana, killed a total of 695 people, and an estimated $16.5 million in damages (National Weather Service, 2011). Luckily, the tornado’s path was largely rural farmland with scattered small towns between them. <Add thesis>
Do you know about hurricanes and tornados? This will blow your mind. This can be a great discovery. There are people that chase hurricanes and tornados. They chase tornados and hurricanes.
Tornadoes are one of the deadliest and most unpredictable villains mankind will ever face. There is no rhyme or reason, no rhythm to it’s madness. Tornados are one of the most terrifying natural events that occur, destroying homes and ending lives every year. April 29th, 1995, a calm, muggy, spring night I may never forget. Jason, a buddy I grew up with, just agreed to travel across state with me so we could visit a friend in Lubbock. Jason and I were admiring the beautiful blue bonnets, which traveled for miles like little blue birds flying close to the ground. The warm breeze brushed across the tips of the blue bonnets and allowed them to dance under the perfectly clear blue sky. In the distance, however, we