A hurricane moves in a very wide path over water.
Evaporation of sea water does absolutely nothing for a hurricane except provide water vapor. When the water vapor turns back to water in the form of rain it gives off heat. Hurricanes are massive heat engines. As long as they have water vapor to turn into heat they can continue blowing along. Without water vapor, the hurricane has no source of heat.
No, warm water fuels a hurricane
A hurricane will weaken if it moves over cold water.
Hurricane Katrina affected the water supply because it became contaminated by flooding water. The water was not drinkable because of the toxins and environmental contaminants that were mixed with it, along with the seawater.
Water moving along the grounds surface is called a river or a flood.. A river or a flood both contain moving water. River water is consistently moving. A flood will have water moving until it goes away.
A tornado moves in a relatively narrow path on land
These are typically called fumaroles, and can occur along cracks or fissures in the ground.
storm surge
hurricane
runoff
No. Hurricanes produce large waves that can capsize boats. The safest place to be during a hurricane is on high ground.
Evaporation of sea water does absolutely nothing for a hurricane except provide water vapor. When the water vapor turns back to water in the form of rain it gives off heat. Hurricanes are massive heat engines. As long as they have water vapor to turn into heat they can continue blowing along. Without water vapor, the hurricane has no source of heat.
i learned this in grade 8 science and im pretty sure its called ground water
deposition, ground water, delta
No, Runoff is when water runs off the ground, IE: if you have a hill, the water will run along it without infiltrating (seeping into the ground), but, precipitation is raining
No. A hurricane on water is simply a hurricane. Tsunami is a large wave triggered by an underwater disturbance such as an earthquake. A hurricane is a type of storm.
No, warm water fuels a hurricane