Not usually. Most tornadoes form over land.
No. A tornado on the ocean or some other body of water is called a waterspout. A funnel cloud is a tornado that has not yet touched down.
It can. Hail often does come before a tornado, but most storms that produce hail do not produce tornadoes.
The direction of a tornado can vary, but tornadoes in Missouri often come from the southwest or west due to the prevailing weather patterns in the region.
A tornado's formation can be sudden and unexpected because it requires the right combination of atmospheric conditions, such as warm, moist air meeting cooler, drier air. When these conditions come together, it can create a rotating column of air that can quickly develop into a tornado. This is why tornadoes may appear to come out of nowhere.
Yes. It is possible for tornadoes to merge and form a larger tornado, though this is a fairly rare occurrence.
A tornado on water is called a waterspout.
Tornadoes generally form over land, not the ocean. You are thinking of hurricanes. The term hurricane refers to a tropical cyclone that occurs over the Atlantic Ocean or the eastern Pacific ocean.
No. A tornado on the ocean or some other body of water is called a waterspout. A funnel cloud is a tornado that has not yet touched down.
Yes. Tornadoes have formed on oceans and lakes (in whic case they are called waterspouts) and come onto land.
A tornado at sea is not called a "toofan," it is called a waterspout. You may be confusing this with "typhoon" which is a hurricane in the western Pacific Ocean.
tornado alley
It dose not turn like a tornado.
A tornado over a body of water is called a waterspout.
There is no way of knowing when the next tornado will be.
Not usually. Tornadoes generally form on land. Kansas is one of the most tornado prone area in the world and it is nowhere near the ocean.
THAT Depends on where the Storm that produced that Tornado is going
it's called a water spout.