The Tornado: Nature's Ultimate Windstorm

Front Cover
University of Oklahoma Press, Jan 1, 2001 - Nature - 324 pages
Tornadoes occur in every state in the Union, and each region of the nation has its unique "tornado season". The most intense tornadoes can carry automobiles a half-mile and level a well built home. Some tornadoes have crossed mountains, seemingly unimpeded. Some have lasted more than an hour, scouring the earth with wind speeds of 250 miles per hour. Nor are tornadoes unique to the United States. In Bangladesh, for example, they have killed a thousand people in a single swath.

Filled with dramatic accounts of tornado touchdowns, this book addresses the whirlwind of questions surrounding the phenomenon of the tornado. How often does a tornado hit a particular location? How fast are the winds? Do tornadoes really seek out trailer parks? Can they actually defeather a chicken? How many tornadoes hit the United States every year? How big can tornadoes grow?

Thomas P. Grazulis, a tornado research meteorologist and founder of the Tornado Project, has been a consultant for television specials, including Cyclone (National Geographic), Target Tornado (The Weather Channel), Forces of Nature (CBS), and others, helping provide answers to these questions for the general public. Here he sets the record straight about tornado risk, the Fujita Scale, and the number of tornadoes occurring annually. He also sheds light on misconceptions and contradictory theories about tornadoes.

 

Contents

III
3
V
15
VII
27
IX
50
XI
77
XIII
117
XV
130
XVII
146
XXII
194
XXIII
215
XXV
251
XXVII
264
XXIX
283
XXXI
291
XXXIII
303
XXXIV
305

XVIII
159
XX
174

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About the author (2001)

Thomas P. Grazulis, Director of The Tornado Project & fellow of the American Meteorological Society, lives with his wife, Doris, in northern Vermont.

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