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Christa Suchowski searches through a home destroyed by a tornado in Marysville, Ind.

Christa Suchowski searches through a home destroyed by a tornado in Marysville, Ind., Sunday, March 4, 2012. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

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Report: 'Tornado Alley' growing wider

Researchers think it should be expanded

Updated: Wednesday, 11 Apr 2012, 10:16 AM EDT
Published : Wednesday, 11 Apr 2012, 10:15 AM EDT

(CNN) - If it isn't "Tornado Alley" anymore, how about "Tornado Field?" According to a report by CoreLogic, a California-based research and consulting firm, tornadoes are striking in more parts of the U.S. more often.

The traditional boundaries of Tornado Alley center on the Plains states of Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska and South Dakota.

Researchers think it should be expanded to include much of the Midwest and Deep South.

Only one state in the traditional Tornado Alley - Kansas - was among the top five states for the most tornadoes from 1980 to 2009.

Tornadoes and the storms that generate them account for 57 percent of insured catastrophic losses in the U.S. each year.

  • 4 Warn Weather Forecast

Latest 4 Warn Weather forecast

Warmer for Sunday.  Isolated showers possible.

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