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Tornado!

Tornado!. Introduction to Lesson 37 “Warning Signs'. Ben Franske. What is a tornado?. A tornado is a violent, dangerous, rotating column of air that is in contact with both the earth and a cloud. Sometimes they are called twisters. Where do tornados occur?.

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Tornado!

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  1. Tornado! Introduction to Lesson 37 “Warning Signs'

  2. Ben Franske

  3. What is a tornado? A tornado is a violent, dangerous, rotating column of air that is in contact with both the earth and a cloud. Sometimes they are called twisters.

  4. Where do tornados occur? They have been reported on every continent except Antarctica, but the vast majority of them occur in the United States in what is known as Tornado Alley, an area recognized as being generally between the Rocky Mountains and the Appalachian Mountains. Texas reports the most tornados. Next is Kansas, then Oklahoma.

  5. Juergen Pohl Germany

  6. Daphne Zaras Oklahoma

  7. Binger, OklahomaWedge Tornado, almost a mile wide

  8. RopingTornado Oklahoma

  9. Oklahoma This is the same tornado seen at about the same time. In top frame, the sun is behind the camera, shining toward the tornado and causing it to appear bluish. In the bottom frame, we are looking at the tornado from the opposite direction, with the sun behind the tornado which makes it appear dark.

  10. Alabama Frank Peters

  11. Texas

  12. Multivortex tornado in Dallas, Texas

  13. Birth of a TornadoTexas, 1995 In first frame, rotating cloud base lowers In second frame, lowering clouds become a funnel, with winds kicking up dust and debris In third frame, touchdown!

  14. Jonathan Nafarrete California

  15. Lisa Jacobs Massachusetts

  16. Alabama JLS Media

  17. Arizona Dust devil

  18. Waterspout Florida Keys

  19. Salt Lake City, Utah

  20. Connecticut Russ Glasson

  21. Connecticut Russ Glasson

  22. Ringgold, Georgia, 2011

  23. Tornado Warning! Ben Franske

  24. Tornado Myths • A green sky indicates a possible tornado. (A green sky can be associated with severe weather but is not specifically linked with tornadoes.) • Opening windows will lessen the damage caused by a tornado. (While there is a large drop in atmospheric pressure inside a strong tornado, it is unlikely that the drop would cause a house to explode, and it is possible that opening windows increases damage rather than lessens it.) • Highway overpasses provide adequate shelter from a tornado. (A highway overpass is a dangerous place to be during a tornado. They can be directly struck by a tornado and when this happens, a fatality is likely to occur.) • The southwest corner of a basement provides the most protection from a tornado. (The safest place is the side or corner of an underground room opposite the tornado’s direction of approach or the central-most room on the lowest floor.) • A major river or being up against a hill or mountain offers protection during a tornado. (Tornadoes have crossed major rivers and climbed mountains.)

  25. How To Be Safe Though tornadoes can strike in an instant, you can increase the chances of surviving a tornado. When a warning is issued, going to a basement or an interior first-floor room of a sturdy building greatly increases chances of survival. In tornado-prone areas, many buildings have storm shelters on the property. These underground refuges have saved thousands of lives.

  26. If driving on the road when a tornado approaches, it is advised that drivers park their vehicles far to the side of the road (so as not to block emergency traffic) and find a sturdy shelter. If no sturdy shelter is nearby, getting low in a ditch is the next best option. Highway overpasses are one of the worst places to take shelter during tornadoes, as they are believed to create a Venturi effect, a term that describes the increased danger from the tornado by the increased wind speed and funneled debris underneath the overpass. Next is a picture of a sturdy building.

  27. Alabama 2011 Tornado WildBamaBoy

  28. Video of the Billings, Montana, tornado is at: http://www.wtsp.com/news/topstories/story.aspx?storyid=134544 And a gallery of pics can be seen at: http://download.gannett.edgesuite.net/wtsp/webgallery/2010/billings-montana-tornado/index.htm#1

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