No. A "sand tornado" (which is a dust devil, not an actual tornado) will move in whatever direction the wind around it is blowing.
They hold onto the sand with their sticky feet.
You can go in a place without glass like windows
A tornado results in secondary succession. The plants on the surface are destroyed, but buried seeds generally stay in place and the soil remains mostly intact.
It is safest to stay underground if you hear/see a tornado.
If there is a tornado emergency, you need to seek shelter immediately. Always seek shelter in a basement or other place low to the ground. Try to stay somewhere where there are no windows.
Tornado season in Pennsylvania typically peaks in the late spring and early summer months, with May and June being the most active. However, tornadoes can occur at any time of the year in the state. It is important to stay informed about weather conditions and have a plan in place to stay safe during tornado season.
A sand tornado is not truly a tornado. It is a phenomenon called a dust devil. Dust devils are whirlwinds that form when a layer of hot air forms just above the ground and rises in a relatively small, rotating column, picking up up dust or sand as it does so. Dust devils are rarely strong enough to cause damage, and are much weaker than tornadoes.
Alley
The safest place to be in your house during a tornado is in the basement.
until the tornado ends and then the people fall and die or get injured
No, it is not possible to stop a tornado. Tornadoes are highly unpredictable and powerful natural disasters that form due to specific weather conditions. The best course of action is to have a plan in place to seek shelter and stay informed during tornado warnings.
The place with the most tornado sirens would have to be tornado alley