Yes. There have been many accounts of tornadoes crossing lakes and rivers, and sometimes moving into the ocean. If a tornado move onto water it is called a waterspout.
Yes, but it is typically referred to as a water spout.
Yes. A tornado that forms on water, called a waterspout, can move on to land and cause damage. Most are EF0 or EF1 strength.
Yes, there have been many cases of tornadoes on water (called waterspouts) moving onto land and causing damage.
Yes. A tornado that moves onto water is considered a waterspout.
A waterspout can transition from water to land but becomes a tornado as long as it is touching land; if it is not touching the ground it would be called a "funnel cloud".
Tornadoes can form on both land and water, but are most commonly seen on land.
They can form on either on water or on land, but it is more common for them to form on land. A tornado on water is called a waterspout.
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.
A tornado that doesn't reach all the way down is a funnel cloud. A tornado on water is a waterspout.
A waterspout it a tornado that forms on a body of water. It looks like a land formed tornado but on a smaller scale.
No. Cyclones and tornadoes are completely different phenomena.
Yes... It's a Tornado, but the difference of a waterspout hits a body of water. And a Tornado hits a body of land.
A tornado moves in a relatively narrow path on land
Fair weather (non tornadic) waterspouts usually dissipate once they hit land. A tornadic waterspout just continues on land as a regular tornado.
Tornadoes can go over hills and mountains.
so they could go to places faster or get across water that sonic cant go in and tornado is a plane