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Survival-Storms : Tornadoes rip through Colorado, Kansas; 1 killed
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(2 recommendations so far) Message 1 of 3 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameAdvnelisgi®  (Original Message)Sent: 5/23/2008 6:14 PM
Tornadoes rip through Colorado, Kansas; 1 killed

WINDSOR, Colo. - A large tornado skipped through several northern Colorado towns on Thursday, destroying dozens of homes, flipping tractor-trailers and freight rail cars, and killing at least one person........



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 Message 2 of 3 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameAdvnelisgi®Sent: 5/23/2008 6:18 PM

tornadoes....
Nature's Most Violent Storms

Adapted from: A PREPAREDNESS GUIDE Including Safety Information for Schools U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration National Weather Service September 1992 (NOAA, FEMA, The American Red Cross); PDF version pdf

Tornado!

http://www.nssl.noaa.gov/edu/safety/tornadoguide.html


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(1 recommendation so far) Message 3 of 3 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameAdvnelisgi®Sent: 5/23/2008 6:27 PM
Tornadoes - Many Are Different From
What Dorothy Saw

A Look at Different Shapes & Sizes of Tornadoes
 
 
Tornadoes are the most violent storms on Earth. Winds spiraling into them usually exceed 100 mph and can reach
speeds of 300 mph. In the USA, an average of 1,000 tornadoes spin up beneath thunderstorms each year, and these
typically kill about 60 people.

Tornadoes and the threat of tornadoes are a key part of the USA's spring weather because spring brings favorable
tornado conditions. But tornadoes can occur any time of the year, during the day and at night.
 
The National Weather Service defines a tornado as "a violently rotating column of air in contact with the ground and
pendant from a thunderstorm." In other words, a thunderstorm is the first step in the creation of a tornado. Then, if
other conditions are right, the thunderstorm might spin out one or more tornadoes.
 
The three key conditions required for thunderstorms to form are:
 
�?Moisture in the lower to mid levels of the atmosphere.
 
�?Unstable air. That is, air that will continue rising once it begins rising from near the ground.
 
�?A lifting force. Something is needed to cause the air to begin rising. The most common lifting force is heating of air
near the ground. As the air warms it becomes lighter and begins rising. Advancing masses of cool air, which force
warm air upward, also trigger thunderstorms.
 
When all the conditions are present, humid air will rise high into the sky and cool and condense into towering clouds,
forming thunderstorms. This air rising into a thunderstorm is called an updraft. Tornadoes form in within a
thunderstorm's updraft.
 
The strongest tornadoes are often near the edge of the updraft, not far from where air is descending in a downdraft
caused by the thunderstorms with falling rain or hail. This is why a burst of heavy rain or hail sometimes announces a
tornado's arrival.
 
Tornadoes are commonly associated with the nation's heartland �?in a 10-state area stretching from Texas to Nebraska
that also includes Colorado, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Missouri and Arkansas, known as Tornado Alley.
But, they are not limited to this region. Tornadoes have occurred in all 50 U.S. states and are, in fact, more common in
Florida than they are in Oklahoma.
 
Florida tornadoes are generally weak �?for tornadoes �?with winds around 100 mph.
 
Tornadoes that have hit Oklahoma, on the other hand, are some of the most violent on record. A tornado that struck
Oklahoma City and its southern suburbs in 1999 had winds of nearly 320 just above the ground.
 
Tornadoes are ranked by the damage they do using the six-tiered Fujita Scale. F0 and F1 tornadoes on the scale are
considered "weak" and cause minimal to moderate damage with winds from 40-112 mph. F2 and F3 tornadoes are
considered strong, packing winds of 113-206 mph that can cause major to severe damage. Violent tornadoes are those
classified F4 and F5 with winds exceeding 206 mph. Damage is extreme to catastrophic.
 
Most weak tornadoes last 10 minutes or less, traveling short distances. Violent tornadoes have been known to last for
hours and a few have traveled more than 100 miles.