Waterspouts can form on virtually any body of water so long as it is warmer than the air above it. They are particularly common around The Florida Keys.
they form in water typically in oceans
Yes they can. They usually form under cumulus congestus clouds They are called fair weather waterspouts.
probably... there are water spouts for sure tho
when a tornado goes to a ocean (usually) and water goes to its VORTEX
Yes, they can but they usually dissipate rapidly when they do.
Springs
ash clouds are formed when the clouds are near volcanoes the magma spouts in the air.
Mostly in storms over water.
Maxwell has written: 'Description of water-spouts' -- subject- s -: Waterspouts
Old Faithful Geyser in Yellowstone National Park was so named because it faithfully spouts water about every 60 to 110 minutes. Due to earthquakes and vandalism, the average interval has lengthened through the years.
Yes it is a tornado over the water. However it is easier for a tornado to form over water and is generally smaller and weaker. Waterspouts are generally not officially counted as tornadoes unless they hit land.
Ultimately, all of them do. Most tornadoes do not form on water, but all of them develop from thunderstorms. Thunderstorms ge their energy from moisture in the atmosphere.