Understanding the force behind tornadoes and their devastating potential.

A tornado is a severe and catastrophic meteorological phenomena formed when strong winds and thunderstorms clash. It is a furiously spinning column of air that extends from a thunderstorm down to the earth.

What Is a Tornado?

Collision of warm and cold air spawns nature's wrathful vortex.

How Tornadoes Take Shape

Warm, moist air meets cold, dry air, sparking tornadoes.

Factors Leading to Tornadoes

Supercell and non-supercell, each harboring unique destructiveness.

Forms of Tornadoes

Massive vortexes of destruction born from rotating thunderstorms. Supercells can also produce various severe weather phenomena, including large hail, strong winds, and of course tornadoes.

What is Supercell Tornadoes

Non-Supercell Tornadoes are usually short-lived and weak although they can occasionally grow strong enough to cause property damage and lives. 

What is Non-Supercell Tornadoes

Swirling winds, thunderstorms collide, unleashing destruction and chaos.

What Happens During a Tornado?

Shattered homes, uprooted lives, and communities left in ruins.

Effects of a Tornado

Seek shelter, stay informed, and prepare an emergency kit.

Safety Measures

Tornadoes unleash devastation, but communities rebuild with resilience and hope.