A tornado moves with its parent thunderstorm. As the tornado moves air flows into it and accelerates to great speeds. Objects caught in the path may be damaged or destroyed.
Fair weather (non tornadic) waterspouts usually dissipate once they hit land. A tornadic waterspout just continues on land as a regular tornado.
A water spout is a type of tornado that forms over water. It happens when a tornado crosses over a body of water and starts pulling up water into the air. The spinning motion of the tornado creates a funnel-shaped cloud with water droplets.
Tornadoes usually move faster. The average tornado moves at 30-35 mph while the average hurricane moves at about 20 mph.
The area in which the tornado happens can erode the area away cause the animals that lived there to have no home or die of the tornado
Rapidly.
A coastal tornado is a tornado that strikes a coastal area. If the tornado moves over water at any point it is called a waterspout for that time.
Air around the tornado spirals in toward it and then spirals moves upward in the tornado itself. The winds are very strong and can cause major damage to vegetation and man-made structures. Parts of destroyed structures can get carried by the winds as dangerous debris.
Air in a tornado moves up because the tornado forms in the updraft portion of a thunderstorm.
A tornado moves with the thunderstorm that produces it, which its in turn steered by large-scale wind patterns.
A tornado is made of air. Air moves into a tornado and spirals upward at high speed.
It is a tornado.
A Tornado.