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Northern Illinois University map |
"Although Tornado Alley still remains the top U.S. area for tornadoes, areas to the east are catching up, based on data from 1979 to 2017. That includes portions of Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Tennessee and Kentucky," Doyle Rice reports for USA Today.
Those areas are feeling the financial pain of increased storms: "Severe thunderstorms accompanied by tornadoes, hail and damaging winds cause an average of $5.4 billion of damage each year across the United States, and 10 billion-dollar events are no longer uncommon," according to the Northern Illinois University study, which was just published in Climate and Atmospheric Science. The human toll is considerable too. An average of 40 people in the southeastern U.S. die each year from tornadoes, Rice reports. More than 70 people nationwide are killed on average from tornadoes, 10 of them from Tornado Alley states Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas.
The study predicted that tornado activity will increase in future years, and that a swath of the Mid-South with Memphis in the center has the greatest potential for increased tornadoes by the end of the century, Rice reports.
from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/2CpsfTz Southeast U.S. part of new Tornado Alley - Entrepreneur Generations
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