the entire world would be destroyed and you too so don't do it
No. While many tornadoes have caused an incredible amount of destruction, they are not given names.
Fred caused no damage at all because he was nowhere near land.
Because they don't... yep, that's pretty much it
Answer: An oomycete named Phytophthora infestans
We couldn't imagine what type of catastrophe had caused so much destruction in our small town.
It caused widespread destruction, leaving thousands of homes and buildings damaged or destroyed. The hurricane also resulted in major flooding, power outages, and significant economic losses for the affected areas.
Much of the destruction caused by the Great Chicago Fire was to the buildings constructed of wood. After the fire, building codes were changed to require stone and brick construction.
The drinking water shortage, destruction caused by too much rain. 15,000 people in total, have been affected.
An action in a war, is a thing no one can change.
of course more countries will aquire more nukes the post soviet era has led to some missing or undefended nukes which are easy to obtian,if you have enough money and with more and more coutries obtaining nuclear power it isn't much harder to enrich uranium further to weapon status and other countries a;ready have acquired nukes like Iran and north Korea and so with more developing countries becoming more industralized it is inevitable that more sountries will develop nukes in their quest for power and land
after so much destruction, the destruction of gas lines per say and an electrical pole would result in a fire, among countless other possibilities.
Bottleneck events are not always caused by the death of most of a species population. Bottleneck events can be caused by man hunting a species too much, habitat destruction, or an environmental disaster.