Hurricanes affect the geoshere in many ways.One of which includes moving the ground from one place to another and also moving buildings along with it. When these buildings move some could fall and very rarely they stay standing. Huricanes also blow down many trees and plants.
It depends what hurricane it is and how big it is Ex:Hurricane Irene affected geography because it broke some islands in the outer banks which so pieces of North Carolina weren't together any more like a broken puzzle. The cause of this is erosion from waves and storm surge. Flooding and landslides resulting from hurricane rains can also change geography.
hurricanes as we all know are very destructive to land forms as we all know that hurricanes have a destructive speed of over 150 miles per hour.Hurricanes ussually form in hot tropical areas for instance Florida , when a hurrican forms we can see from space a large hole which is called the eye of the hurricane and as well most of the time in the centre whichcauses the most damage to the landform, i hope this information work even though im only thirteen
probably leave ditches holes and broken landform
They create huge impact. They, leave lots of holes, ditches, and literally break the landforms.
They leave ground water, which soaks into the earth and floods. Dangerous winds and waves can reshape coastal landscapes by moving large amounts of sand.
it tears stuff up.
Yes. The change can be dramatic.
It affects it by making it fertile
Atlantic
No. While hurricane remnants may perhaps affect Milwaukee, it is too far from the ocean to be hit by an actual hurricane.
Hurricane Irene affected Haiti, the Dominican Republic, the Bahamas, and the United States.
it affects its landscape by the food and enviroment
The Greeks believed in a pantheon of gods and goddesses who resided in various natural elements like mountains, rivers, and forests. As a result, they saw the landscape as sacred and infused with divine presence. This perspective influenced their rituals, festivals, and mythological stories, shaping their connection to the land.
Yes
All of them.
i d know
this had effected buildings
Ian is the volcano
It incises itself into it.
Yes. The change can be dramatic.
It affects it by making it fertile
the equator is a theoretical (man-made) line, so has no bearing on the physical landscape
It would depend on how big the hurricane is and in what direction it is moving in.