There would be massive destruction. Hurricanes usually bring thunderstorms and occasionally tornadoes. Tornadoes always form from thunderstorms and are often accompanied by hail. Earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and tsunamis can go hand-in-hand as well.
However, it is impossible to have hail and tornadoes occur in the same place and at the same time as a snow storm. You also cannot have a hurricane and a snow storm at the same time unless the hurricane is going post-tropical.
It's possible, especially considering that some volcanoes can erupt almost continuously for months or even years. But if a volcanic eruption occurred in the same area at the same time as a tornado it would be entirely by chance.
Yes, though it is highly unlikely. It is fairly common for hurricanes to produce tornadoes. Earthquakes are a a different matter. Earthquakes are completely unrelated to hurricanes and tornadoes, so if they were to strike the same area at the same time, it would have to be completely by coincidence.
There both destructive.
Yes
a dome volcano is not the same as a cone volcano. a dome volcano is a type of volcano, is a roughly circular mound-shaped protrusion resulting from the slow extrusion of viscous lava from a volcano. Usually it extrudes very slowly, but constantly. A cone volcano has an appearance of an upside-down funnel with a hole in the top which the lava shoots out of.
kind of
Potentially. It is actually fairly common for hurricanes to produce tornadoes. While tornadoes and hurricanes are weather events, earthquakes are geologic and are completely unrelated to weather. Nothing would actually prevent a hurricane or tornado from striking at the same time as an earthquake, but such an event would be entirely by coincidence and therefore extremely unlikely.
There both destructive.
Long term predictions about tornadoes are impossible to make. While there is a chance that Frankfort, NY could get a tornado, there is no way of say where or when. The same goes for any location.
Lightning frequently accompanies tornadoes anyway. On the unlikely even that a tornado occurred during an earthquake, there would probably be more damage than either of the two could do on their own.
The lightning can light up the tornado, but nothing else really happens. This is a rather common occurrence as tornadoes form from thunderstorms.
Yes, this occurs sometimes during tornado outbreaks.
It is possible but extremely unlikely. If a tornado an earthquake were to strike at the same time it would be purely by coincidence.
For a massive wedge tornado, anything short of a nuclear bomb would probably not do much. A nuclear bomb would probably disrupt it, but at the same time would cause far more damage than the tornado itself could.
No, volcanoes don't occur in the same place because there was a volcano in Hawaii and maybe somewhere in Asia.
Yes. It is located in the middle of the united states (Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas etc) due to a favorable climate setup. Tornado Alley does not move, but major tornado outbreak can happen in other regions.
Same as in English: "Tornado" :)
Pretty much the same thing that would happen if a tornado hit anywhere else., and that region, especially the northern part, is prone to tornadoes. Any trees in the tornado's path would likely be damage and possible uprooted or snapped and any man-made structures would also likely be damaged or destroyed. The severity of the damage will depend on the strength of the tornado.
A satellite tornado is a tornado that touches down near and usually orbits a larger tornado within the same mesocyclone.