Hurricanes and severe thunderstorms are both capable of having these effects.
No. A lava flow may trigger convection, but not tornadoes.
A disaster can happen at any time. The trigger depends on the kind of disaster.
No. Tsunamis and tornadoes are completely unrelated phenomena.
One natural disaster that begins with the letter "O" is an "earthquake." Earthquakes occur when there is a sudden release of energy in the Earth's crust, resulting in seismic waves. They can cause significant damage to buildings, infrastructure, and the environment, and can trigger secondary disasters such as tsunamis and landslides. Although not commonly referred to with the letter "O," the term "overland flooding" may also apply to certain flooding events in specific contexts.
It is fairly common for a hurricane to produce tornadoes around landfall, however, not all hurricanes produce tornadoes, and most tornadoes are not associated with hurricanes.
In the simplest terms, rising masses of warm, moist air trigger thunderstorms. Tornadoes need thunderstorms to form.
No, tornadoes are triggered by interactions of air currents, which are essentially unaffected by earthquakes.
While it was believed to be Sonic, the Iblis Trigger was Mephiles as he was the one who made Elise cry and release the Flames of Disaster within her.
In most cases natural disasters are unrelated to one another, though there are exceptions. Earthquakes are perhaps the most notable, as major ones commonly trigger aftershocks and may be preceded by foreshocks. They can also trigger landslides, tsunamis, and may even stir volcanoes to erupt. Hurricanes can spawn tornadoes and trigger landslides. Landslides may create tsunamis as well. Tornadoes, while not often, a cause of other disasters often occur in outbreaks where a single storm system spawns multiple tornadoes. Storm systems on the whole can be strange. One system may produce tornadoes in one place, a blizzard in another, and flooding in yet another. Storm systems may also interact with one another in strange ways, sometimes having worse effects than any one system on its own.
I am certainly not an expert but have noticed in my own area, near the New Madrid fault, that there is frequently an increase in activity after major flooding. It is also believed that the filling of a dam may have triggered the earth quake in the Sichuan region that killed so many people. I would think that if man made flooding can trigger one that natural flooding could as well. Here is a link to the article.http://www.internationalrivers.org/en/node/3833copy it to the URL and read it; quite interesting.
Flooding can cause erosion and deposition of sediment, altering the topography of the lithosphere. It can also lead to increased groundwater saturation and potential destabilization of landforms due to increased water pressure. Furthermore, flooding may trigger landslides and rock falls, impacting the stability of the lithosphere.
Condensation is not the direct cause of tornadoes. Tornadoes form as a result of severe thunderstorms in the presence of strong wind shear and atmospheric instability. However, condensation within a thunderstorm can contribute to the development of the rotating updraft that is necessary for tornado formation.