Hail and tornadoes are most often associated with cold fronts, but can occur with dry lines or, lest often, warm fronts.
Cold fronts are most often associated with the severe storms that produce hail and tornadoes.
Cold fronts most often bring tornadoes, hail, and other forms of severe weather.
Most often, hail may form because of the updraft that a storm will create. The attached links will give you more information on hail and tornadoes.
Yes. In fact when this occurs the falling hail explodes into snow flakes near the surface. Similar to an asteroid breaking apart as it enters the atmosphere. Not all hail "explodes" therefore you get snow and hail mix. Another popular term for this meteorological phenomena is "Bursting snow." This is common in Northeast United States and Chile. Source: 1982 April, Metorology Quarterly.
No, hail doesn't fall in tornadoes, but it often falls near them.
Yes, hail falls in Maryland, but not as often as in Oklahoma.
Tornadoes are often but not always accompanied by hail. However, the hail is not a result of the tornado itself but the storm that produces the tornado.
Yes. Tornadoes a very often accompanied by large hail.
Often, but not always.
once
Tornadoes are very often accompanied by hail, but not always. In many cases that hail comes before the tornado.
It can. Hail often does come before a tornado, but most storms that produce hail do not produce tornadoes.
Hail can only help create rivers. It doesn't hail as often as it rains or snows, which comprises the majority of the water that flows to form rivers. However, when it does hail, the hail will melt and join the downward flow of water that creates rivers.
Tornadoes are often, but not always preceded by heavy rain and hail. This hail can sometimes be very large.
A thunderstorm. A thunderstorm produces thunder and lightning, rain, and not very often but hail as well.
Hail and tornadoes are most often associated with cold fronts, but can occur with dry lines or, lest often, warm fronts.