Manmade structures are often damaged or destroyed by tornadoes. Roofs and windows are usually the most vulnerable parts. Violent tornadoes can completel obliterate well built houses.
Yes. Tornadoes themselves are small, intense centers of low pressure.
Blizzards, tornadoes, and thunderstorms can all cause power outages by damaging or destroying power lines.
A tornado is more in the field of meteorology, though geography does affect weather.
How often tornadoes occur in different regions is a function of climate. Tornadoes are weather events and climate is the long-term behavior of the weather. In simple terms, tornadoes occur in areas whose climates support the formation of strong thunderstorms and wind shear.
Tornadoes mainly occur in temperate climate zones, though can occur elsewhere. Forest and grassland ecosystems are often affected. Many tornado cross onto bodies of water as well. Tornadoes often affect human developed areas such as towns, suburbs, and cities. Due to the low frequency of thunderstorms desert environments rarely get tornadoes.
Tornadoes can be devastating to vegetation and man-made structures, but the ground itself is usually not affected in any significant way except in the most violent tornadoes. In rare cases tornadoes can be stroung enough to scour away the soil.
Tornadoes can cause catastrophic damage to vegetation and man-made structures.
Tornadoes change habitats by destroying vegetation and manmade structures.
Tornadoes can damage or destroy vegetation an man made structures and can kill or injure people and animals.
No.
Trees and weak structures such as barns, garages, and trailer homes are what tornadoes destroy most often. Sturdier structures such as frame homes are usually only destroyed by strong tornadoes, which are less common than weak ones.
Tornadoes can destroy trees and animal habitats when they hit them.
We cannot stop tornadoes from occurring or from striking communities. It may be possible to reduce the damage done, however, by building structures to standards that allow them to withstand powerful winds. Even then, few structures can survive the strongest tornadoes.
Tornadoes damage and destroy manmade structures and can cause some soil erosion.
Tornadoes do not have catastrophes. They are catastrophes in and of themselves. While many tornadoes cause only minor to moderate damage, intense tornadoes can be devastating. Their powerful winds can rip apart and even blow away structures. The debris from these structures can then be taken up by the winds, adding to the destruction. In some cases tornadoes may destroy entire neighborhoods and small towns.
No... is that a joke...
Tornadoes can destroy animal habitats and kill or injure the animals themselves.