In the long term, the movement of continents and associated landforms can influence the strength or cause of hurricanes.
Hurricanes are neither cause by humans nor geological in nature. Hurricanes are meteorological. In other words, they are weather. Geology is the study of the rocks and sediments that make up the Earth. A hurricane is a powerful storm that develops from atmospheric processes, which makes it a form of weather.
Weather moves gases in the atmosphere
Weather moves gases into the atmosphere.
They are not human related. However they are weather related because of the wind that blows to create the hurricane, and they are also geologic in nature.
No. Cyclones are weather, tsunamis are geological. Sometimes if the hurricane is big enough and starts out way deep in the ocean then there is a good chance it can cause large waves, but a wave generated by a hurricane is not the same as a tsunami.
Yes. A hurricane is a form of extreme weather.
A hurricane is a storm and therefore a weather event.
Tornadoes are a weather event rather than geologic event, as they originate from processes in the atmosphere. However, they are not sigificant contributors to weathering.
All weather events including hurricanes have been a natural part of our atmospheric processes since the planet formed. We can not say therefore where the first ever hurricane was located and if we could the answer would be meaningless as plate tectonics, continental drift and geological process would have moved or indeed destroyed the location over geological time.
No hurricanes are caused by weather, which is inorganic.
No. A cyclone is a weather phenomenon.
did hurricane harvey have any specific weather elements