No. Hurricanes can only develop over warm ocean water and Michigan is too far from the ocean. It can get rain and thunderstorms from the remnants of hurricanes, but these will have long since lost hurricane status. Tornadoes, on the other hand, are not uncommon.
No, by the time a hurricane gets from the Gulf of Mexico to Michigan, it has been downgraded to a tropical depression or remnant low. The storm may be called a 'dying hurricane' but officially, Michigan only gets tropical depressions or remnants from the Gulf of Mexico.
No, it is too far from the ocean.
NOAA has an online chart showing hurricanes from 1851 to 2000s.
Hurricanes happen in the southern US because there are no mountains to cover the powerful cyclone.
On average about 30 hurricanes hit the world in an average year
in the ocean
Everywhere.
NOAA has an online chart showing hurricanes from 1851 to 2000s.
No. Hurricanes can only happen in coastal areas with warmer climates.
Hurricanes happen every year.
Never. Michigan is too far from the ocean to get hurricanes.
Hurricanes happen over hot water ... which is found close to the equator.
In the oceans
Yes, hurricanes are a tropical oceanic phenomenon.
No. Hurricanes only happen when the ocean is close
Hurricanes don't happen in a forest they only happen over water.
Hurricanes happen in the southern US because there are no mountains to cover the powerful cyclone.
There are hurricanes in the UK. They are not on the same scale as ones in other parts of the world, but they do happen.
Sort of. The only difference is there "hurricanes" are called typhoons.