Yes, Flagstaff was hit by an F0 tornado On September 9, 2003. Tornadoes as strong as EF2 have occurred in the general area.
Yes, North Carolina can experience tornadoes. The state is located in a region known as Tornado Alley and is susceptible to severe weather outbreaks, including tornadoes, especially during the spring and summer months. Residents should stay informed and have a safety plan in place in case of tornado warnings.
No. While hot weather certainly makes tornadoes more likely, they have bee recorded at temperatures as low as 50 degrees Fahrenheit (10 degrees Celsius).
Compared with other storms tornadoes are small and form quickly. This makes them difficult to track. Small factors that we can barely detect or can't detect can also affect a tornado. Furthermore tornadoes are not well understood by scientists and they are difficult to study. Their relatively small size and unpredictability makes it nearly impossible to take measurements from inside.
If you are religious you might say God makes tornadoes. However, from a scientific standpoint the answer is nobody. Tornadoes are a natural phenomenon that result from a certain set of weather conditions, not the actions of any person or persons.
Nobody makes tornadoes; they are a natural event.
Yes, Flagstaff was hit by an F0 tornado On September 9, 2003. Tornadoes as strong as EF2 have occurred in the general area.
Antarctica is the continent that does not have tornadoes. Tornadoes typically form over land, so the cold and uninhabited nature of Antarctica makes it unlikely for tornadoes to occur there.
It is not known what makes horses more susceptible to Tetanus.
Yes, North Carolina can experience tornadoes. The state is located in a region known as Tornado Alley and is susceptible to severe weather outbreaks, including tornadoes, especially during the spring and summer months. Residents should stay informed and have a safety plan in place in case of tornado warnings.
the atmosphere makes tornadoes and waterspouts wild,because in tornadoes anything can change at any time due to measures in a super cell thunder storm either temps,dew points, winds or storm path.
A tornadoes color is determined by how the light falls on it, and often the color of soil that it is lifting up.
Tornadoes are produce by thunderstorms. Most tornadoes form in a special kind of thunderstorm called a supercell, the most powerful type of thunderstorm on earth.
9 US fl oz = 266.2mL
Tornadoes are small-scale weather patterns that often come and go relatively quickly. This makes the difficult to predict.
Tornadoes can occur on every continent except Antarctica, but they are most common in North America. Countries like the United States, Canada, Australia, and parts of Europe can experience tornadoes. Cities in Tornado Alley, such as Oklahoma City, Dallas, and Kansas City, are most susceptible to tornadoes in the United States.
Low pressure