Tornadoes and earthquakes kill animals the same way they kill people. Tornadoes kill with objects carried, dropped, or knocked over by their winds and by picking up and throwing the victims themselves. Earthquakes kill by collapsing buildings, knocking objects over, and triggering landslides.
It depends on the size of the tornado and the how strong the earthquake is. Most earthquakes are small on average, so most of the time a tornado is stronger.
A blade of grass cannot kill you, even in a tornado, but the tornado can kill you.
Tornadoes can damage or destroy buildings and vegetation and can kill or injure people and animals.
It is possible but extremely unlikely. If a tornado an earthquake were to strike at the same time it would be purely by coincidence.
Only in the amount of damage they can cause
earthquake
It isn't. An earthquake releases far more energy than a tornado.
It depends on the size of the tornado and the how strong the earthquake is. Most earthquakes are small on average, so most of the time a tornado is stronger.
The effects are, damaging the plants by crushing them and maybe even well kill animals.
A blade of grass cannot kill you, even in a tornado, but the tornado can kill you.
Tornadoes can damage or destroy buildings and vegetation and can kill or injure people and animals.
When you lose a loved one, when you hurt someone or something will happen that can kill you. (e.g Tornado, Earthquake, etc.)
In terms of energy output an earthquake is stronger.
Yes. But the two phenomena are not related even remotely. So if a tornado were to follow an earthquake it would be entirely by coincidence.
Both tornadoes and earthquakes can damage or destroy buildings and infrastructure and can kill and injure people. However they cause damage in different ways.
disastrous as an earthquake/tornado...
3 major earthquakes and 3 tornadoes were recorded in 1925. They were: The 1925 Dali earthquake, the Charlevoix-Kamouraska earthquake and the Santa Barbra earthquake. The 1925 Miami tornado, the Southern Illinois tornado and the Tri-State tornado.