go do research ok
geological
yes
yes
The term "catastrophe" can refer to events caused by a variety of factors, including weather-related disasters (such as hurricanes, tornadoes, or floods), geologic events (such as earthquakes or volcanic eruptions), and human-caused disasters (such as industrial accidents or wars). The specific cause of a catastrophe can vary depending on the situation.
Hurricanes are a weather phenomenon and thus have a cause rooted in weather.
Thunderstorms are weather events.
Volcanoes are primarily a result of geologic processes, specifically the movement of tectonic plates and the build-up of magma beneath the Earth's surface. Weather can influence volcanic activity, but it does not directly cause volcanoes. Human activities, such as mining or drilling, can also potentially trigger volcanic eruptions in some cases, but natural geologic processes are the main drivers.
It's a human and geologic cause.
Wildfires can be the result weather, human action, or geologic activity. Many fires nowadays are caused by humans being careless with campfires or cigarettes. Some even result from deliberate acts of arson. However, there are also plenty of fires sparked by lighting. This is how most natural fires get started. On rare occasions there is a geologic cause: lava flows from volcanoes can start fires. Note however, that no matter the cause, weather plays a major role in how a fire behaves.
it has a weather cause. ----- The cause of a hurricane is warm water providing power to rising heated air, which produces a cyclonic set of winds because of the rotation of the earth. I would say geologic is the best description of these three.
Tornadoes are ultimately caused by weather, as they are violenlt weather events.
Catastrophes can be caused by a variety of factors, including weather-related events like hurricanes, tornadoes, and floods, geological events such as earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, as well as human activities like accidents, pollution, and wars. The specific cause of a catastrophe depends on the circumstances surrounding it.