Hurricanes are produce by weather phenomena, though geologic features can influence them.
Hurricanes are terrifying, yet beautiful storms. Hurricanes have an effect on the human population because when a Hurricane can change the weather, or bring in dangering winds and rains. It can cause people to die.
It depends on the kind of catastrophe. Catastrophes such as hurricanes and tornadoes are caused by weather. Earthquakes and volcanic eruptions are geologic events. Train wrecks and industrial accidents are human-caused.
they affect them because of their gas inside the humans and the gas smells so bad it makes the volcano erupt and the lava kills the people.
ans:- natural bridge....and hoodoo......etc.
Tornadoes are ultimately caused by weather, as they are violenlt weather events.
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.
Hurricanes should be an weather related and geologic in nature
Volcanoes are driven entirely by geologic forces.
No. Although geologic features can influence them, hurricanes are produced as a result of certain weather conditions.
Hurricanes have a cause rooted in weather. They can be influenced by geographic formations and there is some evidence that human induced climate change can influence them as well, but not cause them.
Volcanoes are created by, and react to, geological conditions.
it's manly caused by weather from HEAVY rainfall
an earthquake has a weather goelogic
It's a human and geologic cause.
Hurricanes are terrifying, yet beautiful storms. Hurricanes have an effect on the human population because when a Hurricane can change the weather, or bring in dangering winds and rains. It can cause people to die.
Human and weather causes. For example, a person might cause it by unattending a camp fire, or discarding a lit cigarette. Or wildfires can be ignited by more natural causes such as lightning for example.
some plant such as poison ivy or animals as scorpions, or venomous spiders, or weather as for tornados and hurricanes.