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Originally posted by sdebunker
reply to post by Curious and Concerned
You think maybe houses are built a little better today than in 1925 and 1840, which could of been the result of more deaths in those outbreaks? So, by that fact, we had so many deaths this year would show that the tornadoes this year were stronger considering the scale was changed from the F scale back then to the EF scale used today?
Originally posted by Curious and Concerned
Originally posted by sdebunker
reply to post by Curious and Concerned
You think maybe houses are built a little better today than in 1925 and 1840, which could of been the result of more deaths in those outbreaks? So, by that fact, we had so many deaths this year would show that the tornadoes this year were stronger considering the scale was changed from the F scale back then to the EF scale used today?
Housing construction has definitely improved since 1840. Not only that, but warnings are far more advanced than in the past. A large tornado will still be very catastrophic though. Those particular tornadoes were just an example to show that there have been large tornadoes in the past. But comparing deaths is not a good way to accurately compare tornadoes, as there are many factors which contribute to deaths. For instance, you could get a year with many very strong tornadoes, but if they don't hit well populated areas, there won't be many deaths.
I don't think the change to the Enhanced Fujita scale would affect the statistics too much. But if anything, it seems to bump up the rating for the more destructive tornadoes compared to the old scale, so the EF scale would be slightly exagerating the trends.