well they are both bad but it just depends on how you look at it. i would say land tornadoes aree worst cuz their on land and their aree lotz of homes and ppl in the path and a water spout which is a water tornado can cause great deal of damage to likee damaging fishing, the docks, boats, but itz not as bad cuz there not really to much ppl in the area. hope thiz helps you =)
There are no tornadoes that are made of water, but tornadoes do touch down on water fairly often. Tornadoes on water are called waterspouts.
Tornadoes and hurricanes are two different things. A tornado on water is called a waterspout.
Yes it is a tornado over the water. However it is easier for a tornado to form over water and is generally smaller and weaker. Waterspouts are generally not officially counted as tornadoes unless they hit land.
A tornado that forms on water is called a waterspout.
"Water tornadoes," which are called waterspouts, are divided into two categories. Fair-weather waterspouts, are structured differently and generally weaker than classic tornadoes. Tornadic waterspouts are ordinary tornadoes that happen to be on water, they are just as strong as ordinary tornadoes.
There are water droplets in a tornadoes, which move with the wind. Tornadoes on water pick up some spray, as well. In such instances the water can bugle up a little under the tornado, especially on small lakes and ponds.
If there ever was one on the lake it would be a water spout not a tornado. Tornadoes are on land not water. A water spout is on the water.
Yes. A tornado that forms on water is called a waterspout.
Yes. A tornado on water is called a waterspout.
Most tornadoes contain moisture and are in fact made visible at least in part, by condensation. These are simply typical tornadoes. Some tornadoes are surrounded by heavy rain that falls even right where the tornado is. This is often called a rain wrapped tornado. A tornado that occurs on a body of water such as a lake or the ocean is called a waterspout.
No. Cyclones and tornadoes are completely different phenomena.
No. A tornado that moves onto water will keep going without being significantly affected. In such a case it is called a waterspout. Waterspouts can also develop on water and then move onto land as tornadoes. There are numerous examples of tornadoes crossing water. Most notably, the three deadliest tornadoes in U.S. history all crossed the Mississippi River. See the links below for tornadoes moving across water.