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A Tornado Watch is issued to alert people to the possibility of tornado development in your area.
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A Tornado Warning is issued when a tornado has actually been sighted
or is indicated by radar.
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| Moore, Oklahoma, May 3, 1999 |
Near Enid, Oklahoma, 1960 |
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What To Do
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Signal
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In Elk City, Oklahoma
- A 3 minute series of short siren blasts.
- A TV break (on any cable channel) will be
activated to give storm location.
Your city may use different warnings, contact your city offices to find out what they are.
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Meaning
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A tornado has been sighted or is developing in the immediate area.
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Action
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Seek shelter immediately!
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Shelter: Inside
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Storm Cellar
Basement
Center of house in closet
under table, bed or mattress.
NEVER stay in a mobile home, seek other shelter!
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Shelter: Outside
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Lie flat in a ditch or culvert (watch for flooding)
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When In A Tornado Watch Area
- Monitor TV
- Watch the sky
- Listen to a local radio station
- Listen for siren
- Have flash light, portable radio and blankets handy.
- DO NOT CALL police or fire dispatchers unless it's an emergency.
- No all clear siren will sound
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 Watch The Skies |
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What Is A Tornado
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Tornado (Latin tonare, "to turn"), violent whirling wind,
characteristically accompanied by a funnel-shaped cloud extending
down from a cumulonimbus cloud. Commonly known as a twister or
cyclone, a tornado can be a few meters to about a kilometer wide
where it touches the ground, with an average width of a few hundred
meters. It can move over land for distances ranging from short hops
to many kilometers, causing great damage wherever it descends.
The funnel is made visible by the dust sucked up and by condensation
of water droplets in the center of the funnel. The same condensation
process makes visible the generally weaker sea-going tornadoes,
called waterspouts, that occur most frequently in tropic waters.
Most tornadoes spin counterclockwise in the northern hemisphere and
clockwise in the southern, but occasional tornadoes reverse this
behavior.
The exact mechanisms that cause a tornado to form are still not
fully understood, but the funnels are always associated with violent
motions in the atmosphere, including strong updrafts and the passage
of fronts. They develop within low-pressure areas of high winds; the
speed of the funnel winds themselves is often placed at more than
480 km/hr (more than 300 mph), although speeds of more than 800 km/hr
(500 mph) have been estimated for extremely strong storms. Damage to
property hit by a tornado results both from these winds and from the
extremely reduced pressure in the center of the funnel, which
causes structures to explode when they are not sufficiently ventilated
to adjust rapidly to the pressure difference. The pressure reduction
is in keeping with Bernoulli's principle, which states that pressure
is reduced as velocity increases.
Tornadoes are most common and strongest in temperate latitudes,
and in the U.S. they tend to form most frequently in the early spring;
the tornado season shifts toward later months with increasing latitude.
The number of funnels observed each year can vary greatly in any given
region.
"Tornado," Microsoft ® Encarta. Copyright ©
1994 Microsoft Corporation.
Copyright © 1994 Funk & Wagnall's Corporation.
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Near Elk City, Oklahoma, Mid 1990's
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Links About Tornados and Weather
Near Cordell, Oklahoma
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Beggs, Oklahoma on May 26, 1997
An ITLNet Web Production
To ITLNet Home Page

This is a monster that visited vacationers July 6, 2001, at Myrtle Beach, South Carolina
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