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In the United States, it is your local National Weather Service office. The National Hurricane Center covers the coast and all other logistics.
No
No. Tropical storms develop over warm ocean water and don't remain tropical storms more than a couple hundred miles inland. Even then, Minnesota gets its fair share of nasty storms, including tornadoes, even if it does not get tropical storms.
Hurricanes don't hit areas so far inland. Michigan might see the remnants of a tropical system, but by that time all it is is some rain and tropical (very humid) air.
Hurricane Sandy was downgraded from a hurricane to a post-tropical cyclone on October 29, 2012.
In the United States, it is your local National Weather Service office. The National Hurricane Center covers the coast and all other logistics.
No
tropical along coast, becoming cooler inland at higher elevations; tropical in amazonian jungle lowlands.
Department of game and inland fisheries
No. Nashville is too far inland to get hurricanes. However, some storms have maintained tropical storm status as far inland as Tennessee.
No. Tropical storms develop over warm ocean water and don't remain tropical storms more than a couple hundred miles inland. Even then, Minnesota gets its fair share of nasty storms, including tornadoes, even if it does not get tropical storms.
Virginia Department of Game and inland Fisheries, and the Coast Guard on navigable rivers.
It depends who is asking. If it is the Inland Revenue or any governmental benefits agency then they will class is as income.
Because hurricanes only form over tropical ocean water. They can't make it very far inland.
Hurricanes don't hit areas so far inland. Michigan might see the remnants of a tropical system, but by that time all it is is some rain and tropical (very humid) air.
Land use in northeast Australia is largely tropical and sub-tropical rainforest in the far north, with sugar cane farms along the northeast coastal strip. Further inland, it is largely beef cattle country.
Hurricane Sandy was downgraded from a hurricane to a post-tropical cyclone on October 29, 2012.