Where does tornado alley start and end?

Generally, a Tornado Alley map starts in central Texas and goes north through Oklahoma, central Kansas and Nebraska and eastern South Dakota, sometimes dog-legging east through Iowa, Missouri, Illinois and Indiana to western Ohio.

According to the National Severe Storms Laboratory (NSSL), Tornado Alley states include:

Iowa.

What is Tornado Alley and where is it located?

While most people associate intense tornado outbreaks with spring, weather experts say both the timing and location may be changing and even fewer hit the nation’s traditional “tornado alley” — Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Texas.

Tornado Alley is a loosely defined area of the central United States where tornadoes are most frequent. The term was first used in 1952 as the title of a research project to study severe weather in areas of Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Kansas, South Dakota, Iowa and Nebraska. Tornado climatologists distinguish peaks in activity in certain areas and storm chasers have long recognized.

Is Wisconsin in Tornado Alley?

While Wisconsin isn’t in the heart of tornado alley, its proximity is close. In fact, portions of southwest Wisconsin and adjacent areas of Minnesota and Iowa recorded as many tornado reports per square kilometer as many areas in the heart of “tornado alley” . These statistics corroborate that.

What areas are in Tornado Alley?

Find a cellar or a room without windows on the lowest floor, such as a closet room or bathroom. Avoid windows as the glass can shatter and cause injury. Try to get beneath a sturdy object, such as a desk or table. Cover yourself with a blanket or mattress, or anything protective you can find, like coats and jackets., and more items.

Recent unseasonable twisters tend to touch down in Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, Tennessee, Missouri, Illinois and Kentucky. Scientists and those who study the phenomena agree that tornado outbreaks are moving east.

And, in Midwestern-Southeastern states, excluding Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas — also known as “tornado alley” — December tornadoes increased to 189 twisters, up 78% from 106. The NOAA tornado data has limitations, said Jana Houser, a professor of.

FOX44’s Meteorologist Haley Fitzpatrick further explains this question in this week’s Weather Why’s. Revisiting an important subject in the Part 2 segment.