yes because after a blizzard there are power outages and people die from blizzards.
Arizona cannot get hurricanes as it is too far from the ocean and is too wamr to experience blizzards. Tornadoes have ocurred in Arizona, but they are usually weak and short-lived, and do not cause major damage. Only three people in Arizona have been killed by tornadoes in the past 60 years.
Yes. Snowstorms and blizzards are a common threat to life for people living in and visiting the Himalayas.
blizzards happen in the northern ladatudes
depends blizzard is singular but blizzards is plural
Blizzards are most definitely a threat to Connecticut, seeing that its in New England. Just make sure you take cover
yes because after a blizzard there are power outages and people die from blizzards.
Yes. Some towns and villages on the Sierra Madre Mountains have seasonal snowfalls, and some of them have a small but latent risk of being affected by blizzards.
Arizona cannot get hurricanes as it is too far from the ocean and is too wamr to experience blizzards. Tornadoes have ocurred in Arizona, but they are usually weak and short-lived, and do not cause major damage. Only three people in Arizona have been killed by tornadoes in the past 60 years.
Tornadoes, hurricanes, thunderstorms, blizzards, heat waves, floods, droughts...
Yes. Snowstorms and blizzards are a common threat to life for people living in and visiting the Himalayas.
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Not really. Although tornadoes can hit Tuscon, it is unusual and tornadoes stronger than EF1 are rare in Arizona.
blizzards happen in the northern ladatudes
There are approximately 10.7 blizzards that occur each year. Of course, this not only counts America's blizzards, but also blizzards across the world!
5 blizzards
No, blizzards are fairly common in Antarctica.