The Hallam, Nebraska tornado caused damage the same way that other tornadoes do: though powerful winds and flying debris. As an F4, the Hallam tornado had winds strong enough to tear apart most structures. Even buildings not subjected to the strongest winds were still subjected to enough force that sections were torn away or collapsed under the force of the wind.
In some ways, yes. Most often the damage a tornado causes is used to estimated its peak wind speed. The peak wind estimated in turn is used to assign it a rating on the Enhanced Fujita scale. In some instances mobile Doppler radar has remotely obtained wind speed measurements from inside a tornado, though this method is limited in that it cannot measure winds near the ground where damage occurs. In a handful of cases instruments have been place in the path of a tornado and taken direct measurements. This is difficult, as most instruments cannot withstand the extreme winds of a tornado, and even then the tornado misses the instruments in most cases.
Trailer parks do not attract tornadoes. This is a misconception created by the fact that tornadoes rated F1 and F2 tornado can destroy a trailer but usually not a house. To destroy a house of standard or above standard construction would normally take an F3 or stronger tornado, tornadoes this strong are not as common as F1 and F2 tornadoes. Because a tornado does not have to be particularly intense to cause catestrophic damage to a trailer park, a tornado that strikes one is more likely to recieve media coverage.
Principles of Insurance : Proximate Cause The efficient cause which brings about a loss with no other intervening cause which breaks the chain of events. Example:Firemen remove undamaged stock from a burning building to avoid its involvement in the fire. It is stacked in the open yard and subsequently damaged by rain. Was the proximate cause of the damage the fire or the rain ? If the rain damage occurred before the Insured had an opportunity to protect it then the proximate cause of the damage would be the fire and fire is covered under a fire policy. However, if the stock was left unprotected for an unreasonably long period, the rain would be a new and independent cause of damage and damage caused by rain may not be covered under a policy.
As little as a 20V electrostatic discharge through some modern components will cause latent damage that could cause sudden failure months or years later.
They bother cause damage and disasters
by their windspeed
Yes a tornado can cause property damage ranging from minor roof damage and loss of gutters and siding to complete destruction of well-constructed buildings.
There are two basic ways in which tornadoes cause damage. First, the wind in a tornado carries an enormous amount of force, which can damage tor destroy structures and vegetation. Second, debris carried by a tornado can cause significant damage on impact.
The speed at which a tornado can cause damage to property can vary depending on its intensity and size. Typically, a tornado may cause significant damage within seconds to minutes as it moves along its path, with the most destructive effects occurring near the tornado's center or vortex.
"can cause a great deal of damage" is the predicate in the sentence. It includes the verb "can cause" and the object "a great deal of damage."
When a tornado touches down it means it has reached the ground and can now cause damage. It is not a tornado until this occurs,
Light damage is the descriptor for an F0 tornado. However stronger tornadoes will also cause light damage in areas that they do not hit head on.
Yes. Although isolated tornadoes usually don't get very high intensity ratings, even the weakest category of tornado, EF0, can cause damage.
The cost of damage from the Joplin tornado amounted to $2.8 billion.
The subject of the sentence is "center."
It depends on the tornado and where it hits, though typically damage will not exceed more than a few thousand dollars worth. Sometimes a tornado will stay an an open field and cause no damage at all.
Generally the stronger the tornado, the more severe the damage it causes. A large tornado can affect a larger area than a small tornado and therefore cause a greater quantity of damage, though it is not necessarily more severe.