no i do not know i am asking you,
Storms at sea, crossing foreign territory on land.
The other three from that question are Sea of Clouds, Sea of Nectar and Ocean of Storms are some.The Sea of Tranquility is another famous place on the moon.Note: Ocean of Glass is NOT correct per the WWTBAM question last year.
Sea breeze storms are more likely to occur in warm places because they are primarily driven by temperature differences between the land and sea. In warm areas, the land heats up more quickly than the sea, creating a stronger temperature contrast that can trigger the formation of sea breeze storms.
ok
if you travel by land you could get mugged and it you travel by sea then you could get your ship in a wreck and would instanetly die from a sinking ship
The Timor Sea, the Arafura Sea and the Coral Sea.
Three seas: The Philippine Sea The East China Sea The Sea of Japan
Yes. Particularly destructive or memorable storms have their names "retired" ... there probably won't be another Andrew, or Katrina, or Sandy. But storms that dissipate at sea may have their names used again.
No, storms can form over land as well, although they typically form more frequently and intensively over water due to the higher moisture content and heat energy available. Thunderstorms, for example, can develop over land when conditions are right in the atmosphere.
land, sea, air and space platforms
No. Most planets have storms of one sort or another. One of the most famous storms is the Great Red Spot on Jupiter. It's basically a hurricane that's about three times the size of Earth and has been going on for at least a few hundred years. Another example is Saturn, whose storms have the most powerful lightning strikes of any planet in the solar system.
Red Sea Black Sea Yellow Sea White Sea Plug them in to Google Earth