No, Tornadoes start inside the clouds of their parent thunderstorms and descend towards the ground. Somtimes they can appear to form up from the ground because the vortex is just swirling air when it reaches thr ground and therefore cannot be seen until it starts picking up dust from the ground.
Tornadoes start up in the clouds & make their way down to touch land.
Tornadoes start as a funnel cloud, becoming a tornado when they reach the ground.
Humans cannot start tornadoes.
No, tornadoes cannot be upside down. Tornadoes are vertical rotating columns of air that stretch from the base of a thunderstorm to the ground, with the strongest winds typically occurring near the surface.
The cloud of condensation the a tornado produces is funnel-shaped, wider at the top than at the bottom.
Tornadoes start up in the clouds & make their way down to touch land.
Air moves up in a tornado, but in the process of forming, most tornadoes start as a vortex high up in the clouds.
No, they start from thunderstorms.
No. A lava flow may trigger convection, but not tornadoes.
No. Hurricanes start over water and tornadoes are on land.
Tornadoes start as a funnel cloud, becoming a tornado when they reach the ground.
Definitely Not
Humans cannot start tornadoes.
tornadoes can start in any continent except Antarctica and in the U.S the Midwest is full of rural areas and grassy lands which makes tornadoes to form often in those areas
Tornadoes can develop just about anywhere in the U.S. but are most common on the Great Plains and in the South.
Tornadoes can occur at any time of year. A few tornadoes will happen in January almost every year, with some tornadoes occurring as early as January 1.
Tornadoes can occur at any time of year but the greatest number occur in spring and early summer.