Tornadoes can occur almost anywhere thunderstorms do, though most often in areas with a warm or temperate climate. They occur during thunder storms.
Cumulus clouds don't so much appear in tornadoes. It is more accurate to say that tornadoes descend from cumulonimbus clouds.
Tornadoes happen in both hemispheres.
The top five states with the most tornadoes are:TexasOklahomaKansasFloridaNebraska
in storm lake
Tornadoes can occur just about anywhere in the U.S. but are most common on the Great Plains and in Florida.
Tornadoes are produced by very strong thunderstorms.
Supercells are normally associated with tornadoes.
Tornadoes do not always appear black. The apparent color depends on lighting conditions and how much and what color of soil is being lifted. Many tornadoes appear dark because of perspective: the are lit from behind and are essentially silhouetted against the light source. The same tornado may appear lighter if viewed from a different angle. The storms that spawn tornadoes have very thick clouds that often making conditions appear very dark. The clouds themselves may be black. Some tornadoes may be black as they lift large amounts of black soil into the air.
Its because its the hot month for some places for tornadoes it also depends were you are !
No part of Arizona is completely free of tornadoes, but they appear to be less common in the western part of the state.
In terms of the Fujita/Enhanced Fujita scale rating, you cannot simply judge the intensity based on the appearance, but generally, rapid rotation and large debris indicate an intense tornado. In terms of type, large tornadoes and tornadoes connected to wall clouds are usually supercell-type tornadoes. Tornadoes that appear to consist of a tube of dust may be landspouts.
they are in the wheather path.