i tornado alley
Tornadoes start as a funnel cloud, becoming a tornado when they reach the ground.
Humans cannot start tornadoes.
Tornadoes start up in the clouds & make their way down to touch land.
No. General scientific consensus is that most tornadoes start forming up inside a thunderstorm and extend downward. There is evidence that some tornadoes form from the ground up, however.
Tornadoes can form in mountains, but most do not.
Tornadoes can develop just about anywhere in the U.S. but are most common on the Great Plains and in the South.
Most tornadoes are just a few yards wide when they touch down and grow to 50 to 100 yards wide at peak size.
Most tornadoes happen in spring and summer
Tornadoes can occur in just about any climate except for polar climates and extremely arid climates. They are most common in temperate and subtropical climates.
Most tornadoes form in a region called Tornado Alley, which includes parts of the central United States like Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska. This area is prone to tornadoes due to a combination of warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico meeting with cooler, drier air from the Rockies.
Most tornadoes occur in spring and summer.
Most tornadoes occur in spring.
Tornadoes are most popular in the Midwest.
Most tornadoes are supercell tornadoes.
No, they start from thunderstorms.
The United States has the most tornadoes. The United States was founded in 1776, but the region it now occupies had been tornado prone since at least the end of the last ice age.
Texas. It is proven to have the most Tornadoes in the U.S.