How do geographical features affect tornados? Can any stop them?

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Im wondering how hills, mountains, volcanoes, valleys, canyons, rivers, lakes, oceans and anything I left out affects a tornado–is it safer on one side of a hill/lake than another or will a tornado just plow through or over the hill? I imagine the tornado strength will have an impact but what is best case and worst case (for the tornado). Who wins in the various matchips of geography vs wind?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

Trees. afaik the air in a tornado comes horizontally from ground level. If you cut all the trees (for farmland) there is not horizontal resistance against wind, so it can travel at full speed up into the tornado. Whereas trees provide a constant resistance against horizontal winds.

Its like trying to slide across ice compared to sandpaper.

Trees also regulate temperature by creating clouds by releasing terpenes that the water molecules can bind to to make clouds and rain. Unbalanced temperatures lead to tornadoes (when those temperatures collide).

So trees should be part of the solution, and cutting them down is part of the root of the problem.

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