The last I heard, the long-standing record of Mt. Washington, New Hampshire still stood. Mt Washington is locally known as "Misery Hill", and there is a weather station there. On April 12, 1934, a wind speed of 231 MPH was measured there.
Colorado's highest recorded wind gust came in at 201 mph atop 14,259-foot Longs Peak in 1981 Rocky Mountain National Park. In 1971, the city of Boulder recorded a wind gust at 147 mph.
The strongest wind speed ever recorded happened on April 10, 1996 on Barrow Island, Australia. The wind gust, not associated with a tornado was recorded at 253 miles per hour.
The strongest wind gust ever recorded was from an F5 tornado that struck Oklahoma City on May 3rd 1999. The wind speed was 302 mph.
April 12th, 1934, a wind gust of 231 miles per hour (372 kilometers per hour)was recorded at the Mt. Washington observatory in New Hampshire.
Calgary's highest gust at 127 km/hour occurred in June, 1956, probably during a thunderstorm.
I don't know for sure, but I think it was in the 180-220 MPH range.
Cyclone Olivia produced a record gust to 253 mph, the strongest surface-level wind gust ever recorded.
Hurricane Sandy has peak sustained wind of 110 mph.
tornado
There are no hurricanes in Colorado. It is too far inland.
California: Santa Ana Colorado: Chinook? An Offshore wind (as opposed to and 'onshore' wind)
The actual maximum wind speed for a tornado is not known. The strongest wind ever recorded in a tornado was 302 mph.
Cyclone Olivia produced a record gust to 253 mph, the strongest surface-level wind gust ever recorded.
mt taranaki
Hurricane Sandy has peak sustained wind of 110 mph.
No, Colorado has never recorded an F5 or EF5 tornado, the strongest was an F4. The largest tornado (by path width) on record in Colorado was rated EF3.
The highest sustained wind speed recorded in a tropical cyclone was 190 mph, which was measured in several storms including Hurricane Camille and Typhoon Tip. The highest gust recorded in a tropical cyclone was 253 mph on April 10, 1996 on Barrow Island off the coast of Australia.
no
in the stratosphere
on the lake
On top of mountains.
fire is not the strongest because any thing can take it out water wind and earth, water is not the strongest because it can evaporate and it can be stopped at any cost. earth is definatly not the strongest because water can carve it, fire can melt it if hot enough, and it can't do anything about the wind. so therefoer wind is the strongest because it blows fire away, without wind water would be nothing, and if earth did'nt have wind everything would be hot and destroyed by fire. so wind is the most dominant
tornado