A tornado can move in any direction, but the most common direction of travel is southwest to northeast. Southeast-moving tornadoes are not uncommon.
No. Tornadoes usually move from southwest to northeast.
Most tornadoes in the northern hemisphere move to the northeast.
There were 26 recorded tornadoes in North Carolina in 2010.
That is the most common direction in which tornadoes travel, but they can move in any direction.
No, tornadoes can form in any direction, including from the north, east, south, or west. The direction a tornado forms depends on various weather conditions and is not limited to one specific direction.
Yes and no north in Midwest has barely any tornadoes but south has many tornadoes
No. Tornadoes are not caused when storms converge.
That depends on where you are relative to the tornado. Most tornadoes travel in an easterly direction, so if you are watichng a tornado and are south of it, it will move to your right, and if you are north of it, it will move to your left.
Tornadoes in the northern hemisphere usually spin counterclockwise, while those south of the equator usually spin clockwise.
Tornadoes happen in both northern and southern California.
Montana, South Dakota and North Dakota.
There is no such thing as a "tornado air mass" but tornadoes can occur north of 50 degrees. Tornadoes have been recorded in northern Europe, including the UK and Scandinavia.
from north to south
From the south to the north
Panama move from south amerika to north amerika on 1903...♥
Yes. Tornadoes are not uncommon in North Carolina.
No line of latitude is a north/south line. A move to the north or south is a change of latitude.