Given that this question was asked on June 25, 2013 that state was probably Oklahoma. On May 31 an EF5 tornado skirted the edge of El Reno, just west of Oklahoma City, killing 8 people including renowned storm chaser, Tim Samaras. On the same day destructive tornadoes also occurred in Missouri. A few days before a very large and intense tornado touched down in Kansas.
Tornadoes, with relatively little warning, can rip through man made structures, tearing them apart, bending them up and destroying them. Tornadoes are capable of lifting cars and tossing them. Tornadoes are capable of ripping roofs right off of houses and buildings.
by ripping the prays through out
They can, but most tornadoes happen on land.
Tornadoes are most frequent from April through June.
There were 165 recorded tornadoes in Texas in 1999.
Yes they actually can. These water tornadoes are also known as watersprouts.
Tornadoes are commonly known for tearing swaths of destruction through communities.
That would be highly unlikely. Trees do not stop tornadoes and many tornadoes have gone through forests.
Tornadoes cause damage through their extremely fast winds and through debris carried by those winds.
If you mean only in rural areas, no. Tornadoes have torn through cities as well.
There were no recorded tornadoes in Georgia in August 2003.
There have been no tornadoes ravaging through Europe recently.