Major Tornadoes

Tornadoes are columns of air that spin at a high rate of speed. They are small in scale but can be very violent. The area affected by a tornado's passage is between about 40 and 400 metres in width and between 1.7 and 36 kilometres in length. During a tornado the damage is due to wind as well as an extremely sudden drop in pressure. Tornadoes vary in intensity, measured on the Fujita or F scale, graduated from 0 to 5 based on the level of damage. The main season for tornadoes is from April to October, and every province is subject to the risk of tornadoes. This layer shows some of the major tornadoes that happened in Canada since the beginning of the 20th century to 1999.

Data and Resources

Additional Info

Field Value
Last Updated January 16, 2026, 21:04 (UTC)
Created January 16, 2026, 21:04 (UTC)
contains_pii non
criticality_level Élevé
data_formats JP2; ZIP; other
fair_openness Level 2 - Machine-readable
geographic_scope Canada
sensitivity_level Faible
source_inventaire Inventaire_W
source_url https://open.canada.ca/data/en/dataset/ddddde30-8893-11e0-8cfe-6cf049291510
subject form_descriptors, nature_and_environment, science_and_technology
update_frequency as_needed
year_most_recent 2022-03-14 19:43:50.958000
year_start 2016-09-25 15:05:59.107000