Basically. There's a North Pacific and a South Pacific. I think. (ex: the North Pacific garbage thing)
The same thing grey dolphins of the pacific eat.
I am wondering the same question for the kendall and kylie jenner line
No. A hurricane and a typhoon are really the same thing, only occurring in different parts of the world. A hurricane is a tropical cyclone with sustained winds of at least 74 mph occurring in the Atlantic Ocean or eastern Pacific. A typhoon is the exact same thing in the western Pacific.
PST is Pacific Standard Time PDT is Pacific Daylight (Saving) Time It only matters when referencing GMT. Basically, the same thing.
No. Typhoons and hurricanes are basically the same thing. The only differences is in where they occur. Hurricanes are in the Atlantic or eastern Pacific while typhoons are in the western Pacific
There was a Typhoon Ben in 1986. A typhoon is essentially the same thing as a hurricane, only occuring in the western Pacific.
I've never heard of Pacific Coast Academy (Is it part of a TV program?) but Pacific Coast CHRISTIAN Academy is a real school, for grades K-8, serving Salinas, California. Its website is www.pacificcoastchristian.com or www.northsalinasbaptist.com
Vulcanism - if you are thinking of the same thing as me then they are all mostly extinct volcanoes although some remain active or dormant.
No. A typhoon is essentially the same thing as a hurricane, the difference is where in the world they occur. A hurricane is a storm that occurs in the Atlantic Ocean or eastern Pacific. A typhoon is the same type of storm in the western Pacific. Making landfall does not make a difference. However, a hurricane that crosses into the western Pacific becomes a typhoon and a typhoon that crosses into the eastern Pacific becomes a hurricane, though this is less common.
Stiller Ocean is just the name of the ocean in German. Stiller in German language means exactly same thing as Pacific in Latin - quiet, peaceful. Asking "when" it was named Stiller Ocean is kind of like asking "when" it was named Pacific Ocean.
No. The major indicates importance (major league football), while largest indicates quantity/size (the largest ocean is the Pacific).