They don't change the earth. They change the area by destroying buildings, vegetation, ect.
Tornadoes can affect the Earth's surface by causing significant damage through strong winds and debris. They can uproot trees, damage buildings, and alter the landscape by moving or displacing objects. Additionally, tornadoes can create new paths and change the topography by depositing debris and eroding the land.
No. While most tornadoes rotate in a direction that matches earth's (clockwise in the northern hemisphere and counterclockwise in the southern), a small percentage go against this. The origin of the spin in tornadoes is not directly related to earth's rotation. Most tornadoes also move in an easterly direction, but not always.
Tornadoes can be dangerous to both people and structures on Earth due to their destructive winds and flying debris. However, tornadoes are a natural part of the Earth's weather systems and play a role in redistributing heat and moisture in the atmosphere.
A tornado can change the Earth's surface by uprooting trees, demolishing buildings, and leaving behind debris and destruction in its path. The strong winds and intense force of a tornado can also reshape landscapes by creating new landforms or altering the terrain.
Movement of the Earth's plates does not directly cause tornadoes. Tornadoes are usually formed by the interaction of warm, moist air and cold, dry air in the atmosphere, along with specific weather conditions like thunderstorms. Plate tectonics, which involves the movement of the Earth's crustal plates, occurs within the Earth's lithosphere and is not directly related to tornado formation.
forest fire,hurricanes and tornadoes
No. There were tornadoes on earth before humans existed. Some have tried to link an apparent increase in tornadic activity with climate change caused by humans, but in reality there has been no such increase in activity.
Yes, tornadoes often change in appearance.
Tornadoes demonstrate that Earth's atmosphere can hold quite a bit of energy.
yes they do and so do glaciers, hurricanes, tornadoes and many other things
Outside of tornadoes the strongest winds on earth occur in hurricanes.
Yes!
Tornadoes happen because there is wind on earth!
Tornadoes change habitats primarily by destroying trees and other vegetation.
Tornadoes change habitats by destroying vegetation and manmade structures.
The updraft of a tornado may help somewhat in stabilizing the atmopshere, but the parent thunderstorm normally would do that anyway.
Tornadoes can affect the Earth's surface by causing significant damage through strong winds and debris. They can uproot trees, damage buildings, and alter the landscape by moving or displacing objects. Additionally, tornadoes can create new paths and change the topography by depositing debris and eroding the land.