It could uproot trees and lay waste to town where humans live.
Tornadoes can blow loose soil into the air and, in rare cases, severely scour the soil. Tornadoes may also increase erosion in places by destroying vegetation.
Tornadoes can cause some soil erosion, but it generally is not significant except in some of the most violent tornadoes, which can cause severe ground scouring.
Tornadoes can be devastating to vegetation and man-made structures, but the ground itself is usually not affected in any significant way except in the most violent tornadoes. In rare cases tornadoes can be stroung enough to scour away the soil.
Tornadoes don't really affect aquifers at all. Aquifers are far enough underground to be beyond the influence of tornadoes.
Tornadoes do not affect climate change. They may be affected by climate change, but how is yet to be determined.
Tornadoes can blow loose soil into the air and, in rare cases, severely scour the soil. Tornadoes may also increase erosion in places by destroying vegetation.
The effect of tornadoes, as viewed from an altitude of 150 feet or more, seems to be the total annihilation of anything above ground level. This allows for new growth.
Tornadoes can cause some soil erosion, but it generally is not significant except in some of the most violent tornadoes, which can cause severe ground scouring.
Tornadoes can be devastating to vegetation and man-made structures, but the ground itself is usually not affected in any significant way except in the most violent tornadoes. In rare cases tornadoes can be stroung enough to scour away the soil.
The energy that powers tornadoes ultimately comes from the sun. The sun heats the earth's surface which in turn heats the lower atmosphere. This heat can lead to thunderstorms, which, under the right conditions, can produce tornadoes.
Tornadoes don't really affect aquifers at all. Aquifers are far enough underground to be beyond the influence of tornadoes.
Tornadoes demonstrate that Earth's atmosphere can hold quite a bit of energy.
Tornadoes do not affect climate change. They may be affected by climate change, but how is yet to be determined.
Outside of tornadoes the strongest winds on earth occur in hurricanes.
They don't really. Tornadoes can cause some soil erosion, but this affect is not very significant except in rare cases of extremely violent tornadoes.
Tornadoes can be very destructive to vegetation and man-made structures, but they generally do not affect the ground itself. In rare cases the very strongest tornadoes can cause severe ground scouring.
The 1984 Carolinas outbreak destroyed trees, homes, and places of work.