Want this question answered?
A category 5 hurricane has stronger winds at 157 mph or greater. Category 1 winds, by contrast, are 74-95 mph.
well really the destruction it does , the hurricane has winds hen the earthquake doesn't that one
No. The winds of a tornado are concentrated in a much smaller area. Typically the winds of a hurricane affect an area a few hundred miles across. By contrast the winds of a tornado usually affect an area less than a quarter of a mile wide and rarely more than a mile.
Those winds were called the trade winds at a time when trade, or commerce, was conducted largely by sailing vessels that required wind in order to travel. The trade winds were particularly useful for sailing ships engaged in trade.
Those winds were called the trade winds at a time when trade, or commerce, was conducted largely by sailing vessels that required wind in order to travel. The trade winds were particularly useful for sailing ships engaged in trade.
The winds role in the Navajo creation ceremony is that if the wind blows it makes people walk. If the wind is not blowing, the people do not come to life.
The winds role in the Navajo creation ceremony is that if the wind blows it makes people walk. If the wind is not blowing, the people do not come to life.
A category 5 hurricane has stronger winds at 157 mph or greater. Category 1 winds, by contrast, are 74-95 mph.
The winds role in the Navajo creation ceremony is that if the wind blows it makes people walk. If the wind is not blowing, the people do not come to life.
well really the destruction it does , the hurricane has winds hen the earthquake doesn't that one
In the case of the westerlies, the temperature contrast between the poles and the equator drives these winds. ~SNOOP DOGG~
In the case of the westerlies, the temperature contrast between the poles and the equator drives these winds. ~SNOOP DOGG~
No. The winds of a tornado are concentrated in a much smaller area. Typically the winds of a hurricane affect an area a few hundred miles across. By contrast the winds of a tornado usually affect an area less than a quarter of a mile wide and rarely more than a mile.
A tropical storm becomes a hurricane when its winds reach 74 mph.
No. A cyclone can be any large scale low pressure system and does not necessarily produce strong winds. Tornadoes, though, by definition produce very strong winds. The strongest gust ever recorded in a cyclone was 253 mph. By contrast, winds of 302 mph have been recorded in tornadoes.
Those winds were called the trade winds at a time when trade, or commerce, was conducted largely by sailing vessels that required wind in order to travel. The trade winds were particularly useful for sailing ships engaged in trade.
Those winds were called the trade winds at a time when trade, or commerce, was conducted largely by sailing vessels that required wind in order to travel. The trade winds were particularly useful for sailing ships engaged in trade.