Sometimes a hurricane can produce tornadoes, but most tornadoes are not produced by hurricanes.
Hurricanes, tornadoes, and virtually all other forms of weather occur in the lowest layer of the atmosphere, the troposphere.
there are generally no tornadoes. there are some earthquakes but not as many as the midwest. Hurricanes only occur every few years.
The statements "Hurricanes cover a larger area than tornadoes" and "Hurricanes have strong winds" are both true. Tornadoes most certainly can kill people.
Yes. Hurricanes and hurricane remnants often produce tornado outbreaks.
No hurricanes or tornadoes have been recorded in Afghanistan.
Yes. It is fairly common for hurricanes to produce tornadoes.
Yes. While most tornadoes are the result of other types of storm system, it is fairly common for a hurricane to spawn tornadoes.
Hurricanes, tornadoes, and virtually all other forms of weather occur in the lowest layer of the atmosphere, the troposphere.
Tornadoes are virtually unheard of in Nevada, but can and do occur.
tornadoes, hurricanes
Both can occur in the tropics, though tornadoes are more common in temperate areas. All hurricanes form in the tropics but they can move into temperate regions.
They do, but most tornadoes don't make international news and generally, the strongest tornadoes that do most of the serious damage occur in the U.S. Hurricanes occur in the southern hemisphere, but are called cyclones or tropical cyclones rather than hurricanes.
Outside of tornadoes the strongest winds on earth occur in hurricanes.
Both can occur in the tropics. However it is hurricanes that almost exclusively form in the tropics.
there are generally no tornadoes. there are some earthquakes but not as many as the midwest. Hurricanes only occur every few years.
No, hurricanes are generally easier to predict. Hurricanes are much larger than tornadoes and occur over the course of days, as opposed to tornadoes which typically last a few minutes. As a result it is easier to study and monitor hurricanes and therefor predict them.
Earthquakes can occur in Nevada, which is not far from earthquake-prone California. Tornadoes occur in Nevada on occasion, but they are rare and usually weak. Nevada is too dry and too far inland to get hurricanes.