Tornadoes in the Hydrosphere

(i posted on the wrong class blog page)

tornado
tornado
The hydrosphere is the flow of water, and all the water on the earth’s surface. The hydrosphere covers about 70% of the earth. After researching tornadoes and it's different affects in earth's systems, i found out that tornadoes in the hydrosphere were waterspouts. waterspouts are referred as tornadoes of the sea, because that is essentially what they are. While they hardly have affect on America, I was able to find that they affect Italy, where there are around 71 waterspouts per year. They aren't as serious as a tornado on the geosphere, but they do start chain reactions for whirlwinds, heavy rain, flooding, and hail.

I found waterspouts interesting because they have never directly done a lot of damage, since they take place in the ocean, but there is a beauty to it. Waterspouts can hit peninsulas (like italy), but it is a rare occasion that they do tremendous damage.

there isn't much we can really do to stop a waterspout, as much as we can stop a tornado, it's best to just not be by the shore. They're like a hurricane- tornado hybrid.

For this my group decided to create a tornado with cotton balls, tin foil, and a few miscellaneous objects. After a few glue burns to the fingers, we created a tornado on the geosphere with safety tips, as well as slides with each of our parts describing how tornadoes affect all of earth.

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1fqeEfjQpaar2_I-0SF_nyTUA9wYv3NG011H5QfpUozU/edit?usp=sharing (link to slides)
https://docs.google.com/document/d/19J_KA8iHc-e2zjpfmrdwV6pCn9KZWUgmnjyyn2kEbW0/edit?usp=sharing (link to doc)

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