Yes to all three. Hawaii has had a number of tornadoes, though none have been stronger than F2. Hurricanes are fairly rare in Hawaii's part of the Pacific, but they do happen. The worst was category 4 Hurricane Iniki in 1992. Earthquakes can also occur in Hawaii as a consequence of volcanic activity, with one earthquake registering a 7.9
No
Florida is very prone to both tornadoes and hurricanes. Earthquakes in Florida are very rare, and rarely cause even minor damage.
Yes, Hurricanes and tornadoes have both been known to hit Hawaii.
Earthquakes, tsunamis, hurricanes, and tornadoes are all severe. It just depends on how strong they are and where they occur.
Yes, but the chances of such an occurrence are extremely low. Hurricanes often produce tornadoes, but more often in their outer regions beyond the area of hurricane conditions (sustained winds of at least 74 mph). Hurricanes and tornadoes are not related to earthquakes in any way known to science. Many area that are prone to large earthquakes to not typically see hurricanes or tornadoes very often.
Every state gets tornadoes. Pennsylvania and Ohio have even had F4 and F5 tornadoes. The inland states do not get hurricanes. The Dakotas, Florida, and Michigan have only have a few small earthquakes. Pennsylvania has had a few earthquakes, but none have been very damaging.
Yes. Hawaii does see severe thunderstorms and occasional tornadoes. Hawaii has also has a few hurricanes.
earthquakes, hurricanes, tornadoes
Earthquakes, tornadoes, hurricanes
No, earthquakes happen on there own. Kind of like how you can't stop tsunamis, tornadoes, or hurricanes.
some natural disasters in new jersey is hurricanes tornados and earthquakes.
tornadoes, hurricanes, and earthquakes