Yes the majority of tornadoes happen in tornado alley. However it is not because tornado alley is generally flatter then the rest of the US. It has to do with the warm air from the Gulf of Mexico meeting the cold air from Canada in that region that causes tornadoes to mainly form there.
The colloquial term is Tornado Alley, generally stretching from Texas to South Dakota and Iowa. There is relatively high tornado activity extending from the Rocky Mountains in the west, to the Appalachian Mountains in the east and from the Gulf of Mexico to southern Canada.See the related Wikipedia link for a nice map of the area:
Dixie Alley is prone to tornado for similar reasons to Tornado Alley. The region gets plentiful warm, moist air from the nearby Gulf of Mexico to fuel thunderstorm. Cold fronts formed when storm systems pull cool air down from Canada then trigger the storms. Storm systems passing through this region create wind shear, or differences in ind speed and direction with altitude. The wind shear is just right to set thunderstorms spinning, turning them into supercells which can in turn produce tornadoes.
Tornadoes occur in Texas because it is in the center of Tornado Alley. This is a zone of the Midwest that receives a lot of wind current from the Rockies as well as the conflicting wind current moving from the Gulf of Mexico. This tends to cause the winds to roll and turns sideways causing a Tornado.
Tornado Alley is the Area in the united states of America where large numbers of Tornado's usually take place.Tornado Alley is considered to cover areas of the Central United States. It is not an official term but was created by the media to refer to areas that have greater numbers of tornadoes than others. There are several ideas of what Tornado Alley is, but those ideas are the result of the different criteria used to refer to it.90% of tornadoes hit the Central United States because cold, dry air from Canada and the Rocky Mountains meets warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico and hot, dry air from the Sonoran Desert, which causes atmospheric instability, heavy precipitation, and many intense thunderstorms.The most common definition of Tornado Alley is the location where the strongest tornadoes occur most frequently. The core of Tornado Alley consists of northern Texas (including the Panhandle), Oklahoma and Kansas. However, Tornado Alley can be also be defined as an area stretching from central Texas to the Canadian prairies and from eastern Colorado to western Pennsylvania. It can also be argued that there are numerous Tornado Alleys. In addition to the Texas/Oklahoma/Kansas core, such areas include the Ohio Valley, the Tennessee Valley and the lower Mississippi Valley.
The climate of tornado alley is warm, humid air that usually travels from off the Gulf of Mexico.
The Gulf of Mexico supplies most of the warm, moist air.
The Gulf of Mexico provides surges of warm moist air, which is essentially the fuel that powers the thunderstorms that produce tornadoes.
Texas has two main destructive weathers: tornadoes and hurricanes. Hurricanes evolve from the Gulf of Mexico, so this is your answer. Tornadoes occur more in Northern Texas, away from the Gulf, as this is part of Tornado Alley (an area of high tornado activity).
The colliding air masses in Tornado Alley are warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico, cool air from Canada, and dry air from the Rockies. This collision is just part of the recipe for tornadoes.
Yes the majority of tornadoes happen in tornado alley. However it is not because tornado alley is generally flatter then the rest of the US. It has to do with the warm air from the Gulf of Mexico meeting the cold air from Canada in that region that causes tornadoes to mainly form there.
The states in Tornado Alley are in a region where warm moist air from the Gulf og Mexico frequently collides with cooler drier air from Canada and the Rockies. These collisions produce stron thunderstorms that can, in turn, produce tornadoes.
There is no Tornado County in the US. Perhaps you meant Tornado Alley, an area of high tornado activity in the US. It is located in the Midwest, across the states of Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, South Dakota, Wyoming, Nebraska, Colorado, New Mexico, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas. Tornado Alley has high tornado activity as this is where the cool, dry air of the Rockies meet with the warm, dry air of the Southwest deserts, and the warm, moist air of the Gulf of Mexico, generating violent thunderstorms.
Tornado Alley is in the heart of the US. Northern Texas, Oklahoma, Southwest Iowa, Eastern Colorado, and southern South Dakota. Tornadoes frequently form there because the jet stream mixes with the warm air from the Gulf of Mexico, forming severe thunderstorms that can lead to tornadoes.
Texas is in an area where dry air from the west frequently meets warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico. This, combined with strong wind shear can create violent, rotating thunderstorms called supercells. The rotation within a supercell can produce tornadoes. Conditions are similar through much of Tornado Alley.
In Tornado Alley Warm moist air from the Gulf of Mexico meets with dry air masses from the Rockies and/or cool air masses from Canada. These collisions can produce violent thunderstorms that can sometimes produce tornadoes. See the related question below for more detail.
Tornadoes occur there because warm moist air from the Gulf of Mexico meets cool dry air from the Rocky Mountains or Canada, this creates the thunderstorms that can spawn tornadoes.