Tornadoes on Campus
Tornadoes on Campus
This paper is a risk analysis and management assessment of a tornado striking a university in the Midwest.
880 words (
approx. 3.5 pages) |
1 source |
MLA | 2004
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Paper Summary:
This paper stresses that, even if you have never been through the "tornado experience", you can still be on the lookout in the sky for a greenish or greenish-black color common to approaching tornadoes. The author points out that one should be especially wary if local weather or disaster authorities have issued a tornado watch, which means that a tornado is possible within a narrowly-specified period; a tornado warning is even more serious. The paper relates that, no matter how many tornadoes you have suffered through at home or on your farm, it is particularly important in multi-storied, crowded buildings to move to the interior of the structure, preferably a stairwell or hallway.
Table of Contents
Step 1: Awareness
Step 2: See a Tornado in the Sky
Step 3: The Tornado Strikes
Step 4: What to Do before a Tornado Strikes to Mitigate Risk
From the Paper:
"It is helpful to be aware of what a tornado is, meteorologically and chronologically speaking. There are four main stages in a tornado's life. These are the organization stage, the mature stage, the shrinking stage, and the decaying stage. In the organization stage, the weather conspires to create the classic, funnel-shaped cloud. The mature stage means that the tornado cloud is not at its largest size. "The funnel then decreases to a thin column in the shrinking stage, and becomes fragmented and very disorganized in the decaying stage, although it is still a destructive funnel." "
Tornadoes on Campus (2012, February 08). Retrieved February 12, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Essay-Tornadoes-on-Campus/53112
"Tornadoes on Campus" 08 February 2012. Web. 12 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Essay-Tornadoes-on-Campus/53112>