Tornado

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    Oklahoma Tornado Essay

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    is hit by massive storms and tornados that kill people and wound many others. Although some may say Oklahomans are used to getting hit by storms and tornados, but the outcome is never something we get used to and this year, just like any other, we got hit. On May 20, 2013 an EF5 tornado started to develop and little did we know that this tornado would be talked about everywhere. This tornado did major damage to houses, towns, and buildings, but what got this tornado so much attention was that it

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    experienced meteorologists might not see them. The Tornadoes can appear in many shapes and sizes. According Russian international news agency, they classify the tornado in three broad classes based on the shape. They are water spout, land spout and multiple vortex. They describe the tornadoes as water spout is the most common types, land spout is the tornado whose diameter can exceed its height and the multiple vortex is the most powerful one that causes heavy damages (RIANOVOSTI, 2010). Like

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    ice cover, and change in precipitation patterns. As an extended consequence, extreme weather events are anticipated to become altered as well. The Tri-State tornado of 1925 crossed three state lines causing billions in damage and killing hundreds; it was the deadliest tornadoes in U.S. history. It is difficult to determine whether the tornado was altered by climate change. However, we can theorize about the possible effects of climate change on tornadoes in general to gain insight on future outcomes

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    Tornado Research Paper

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    A tornado is a violently rotating wind that is followed by a funnel-shaped cloud of debris that moves in a narrow path over a body of land. Tornadoes are formed by warm, wet winds and cold, dry air meeting from opposite directions, also known as wind shear. then the air mixes together and starts forming a funnel of wind, pulling clouds with it. Eventually, the funnel-shaped cloud touches down onto a large piece of flat land (e.g. a plain). For example, in the United States, tornadoes form in the

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    Tornado Research Paper

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    People see tornadoes as a threat well let us see, an average of 800 tornadoes reported each year, leading to 80 deaths and 1,500 injuries and ripping a path up to 10-50 miles. Then tearing big buildings, and lifting vehicles hundreds of yards. They can also drive straw into trees, some tornadoes are invisible to see but most catch swirling dust or debris. Warm air rises meeting the cold front, and then the nice warm air will automatically beneath. Since it cannot move anywhere, it starts to move

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    It was a hot day here in Jackson. It felt like summer, but it was fall. Usually when it is this type of climate something is going to happen, for example a tornado. I was outside with my dog, while the rest of the family was inside watching television. I hear the house door open, and my mother comes out. “Wow, it feels warm out here,” said my mother as she was looking at the clouds. “I believed it was going to be a little cold and I came out here with a jacket on.” My mother started walking towards

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    Tornado Recovery Summary

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    This summary will cover the lessons learned and any suggestions necessary concerning the following disaster. On May 22, 2011 a tornado spawned east of the Missouri-Kansas state line from a massive supercell thunderstorm that quickly escalated into an EF-5 monster. This monster tornado tore a half-mile to three-quarter-mile-wide path of total destruction through Joplin, Missouri claiming 161 lives (Smith & Sutter, 2013). The response by the local and state government was immediate bringing in a

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    On May 4, 2007, the town of Greensburg, Kansas was devastated by an exceptionally strong tornado. With maximum winds estimated to be in excess of 205 miles per hour, and leaving a damage path as wide as 1.7 miles, the storm would go on to be rated a rare EF5, the first recorded in the United States since 1999. When the storm finally subsided, 95 percent of Greensburg had been destroyed, killing eleven people. <h3>The Setup</h3> May 4 began in much the same way as many other spring days in the

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    Tornado Short Story

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    parents and younger brothers and sister. As we pulled out of the driveway dad turned on the radio to 104.7 KRES Country. Immediately the broadcaster is giving a weather report saying, “There is a likely chance of severe storms this afternoon and a tornado watch is in effect until 8:00 PM.” It was already getting dark in the west and the wind was starting to pick up. My mom then asks, “Do you think we should leave Darin at home with the storm rolling in?” Dad answers saying, “I doubt it will amount

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    The Tornado I was playing outside on a hot, late afternoon in August. My mother and grandmother were in the house. My dad was at work. I was five. In the time it took to bend down, pick up the ball, and stand, the day changed. No birds sang, no insects buzzed, nothing. “There’s no wind,” I said aloud. It seemed as if the earth had sucked in all the air around me. The hair on my arms stood up. The poplar leaves hung still. I looked around me slowly, as if in a dream. Across Palmer’s fields, where

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