There are water droplets in a tornadoes, which move with the wind. Tornadoes on water pick up some spray, as well. In such instances the water can bugle up a little under the tornado, especially on small lakes and ponds.
A tornado moves in a relatively narrow path on land
Yes. A tornado can move in any direction, though tornadoes that move westward are rare.
Unless its a large, intense tornado crossing a small lake, no. Other storms, such as hurricanes, canrais water levels but tornadoes are too small to move large enough quantities of water.
Yes. There have been many accounts of tornadoes crossing lakes and rivers, and sometimes moving into the ocean. If a tornado move onto water it is called a waterspout.
Yes. Tornadoes very frequently move onto lakes. A tornado on water is called a waterspout. Whether or not there is a person in the lake will not affect a tornado. Generally speaking, though, it is a bad idea to be in or near water during a thunderstorm anyway as even if it does not produce a tornado there is still lightning.
Yes this can be a project because of the water tornado is a mini tornado.
A tornado that forms on a lake or sea is called a waterspout.
A tornado cannot actually be made of water. A tornado can occur on water and suck water into it, but it will still be mostly made of air.
The tornado move is actually in the first game, not the second. And in order to get the tornado move, you have to keep upgrading Aang's offensive moves every time your experience levels up until you get to the Tornado
Yes. When tornadoes move onto water (at which point they are called waterspouts) it can lift fish and occasionally larger creatures out of the water. There is at least one account of such a tornado lifting an alligator.
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.
A tornado usually travels in between 30 MPH to 70 MPH.