Your "science" is on a par with selfsame's.I'm not being very scientific about it - I'm not a scientist - but that's basically the gist of it.
Your "science" is on a par with selfsame's.I'm not being very scientific about it - I'm not a scientist - but that's basically the gist of it.
Your "science" is on a par with selfsame's.
Tornadoes are caused by the wind ricocheting off a mountain range, then travelling to another mountain range and ricocheting off that, then travelling to another mountain range and ricocheting off that and then going back to the original mountain range, thus forming a big circle, and the wind keeps going round and round and round and round and getting faster and faster and faster and narrowing and narrowing and narrowing until it forms a tornado.
We get tornados around here and there ain't no mountains, man.
Yeah, but tornadoes move.
So what?
... and the nearest little ones are a few hundred miles downwind. The nearest mountains UPWIND, from whence our weather comes, are well over 2,000 miles away.
Birmingham isn't near any mountains, but that got hit by tornadoes several years ago.
So, how did the form without mountains?
The tornadoes probably travelled there from the Pennines or the Brecon Beacons.
The montains that theotically would make our tornados are as far from us as Moscow is from you.
Don't be silly. Moscow is 2010.7 miles away from here.
There are no mountains of any description in Ontario
That depends on how far "zoomed out" you are when looking at it.That little speck
That's certainly not true.