The real answer to this question is Queensland and northern territory.
Severe Tropical Cyclone Yasi was a very powerful and destructive tropical cyclone that made landfall in northern Queensland, Australia on 3 February 2011
Cyclone Larry hit the north coast of Queensland.
No tropical cyclones have threatened Washington in any recent time. The storm the threatened Washington was probably a mid-latitude cyclone, which are not named.
Cyclone Yasi caused an estimated $3.6 billion in damage to infrastructure, homes, and agricultural crops in Australia, particularly in the state of Queensland. The economic impact was significant due to the widespread destruction of property and the disruption to industries such as agriculture and tourism. Recovery efforts required large-scale financial support from both government and private sectors.
Cyclone Yasi travelled through more than one country. I'm in the Solomon Islands and it hit parts of this country, and then went to Australia (the state of Queensland). Australia was the last country it hit. I'm not sure where it was before the Solomon Islands..... maybe Fiji.
Yes, Cyclone Tasha caused flooding in Queensland in December 2010. The cyclone brought heavy rainfall, leading to extensive flooding across the state, particularly in the town of Rockhampton. The flooding resulted in infrastructure damage and forced thousands of people to evacuate their homes.
Cyclone Yasi originated in the Coral Sea off the northeastern coast of Australia in early February 2011. It intensified as it approached land and made landfall near Mission Beach, Queensland, before moving inland and dissipating over the eastern parts of the state. The cyclone caused significant damage, particularly in Queensland, before weakening and eventually dissipating over land.
It can cause major disruption.
Iowa State University Cyclone Marching Band was created in 1881.
It's not widely called the cyclone state. It depends on whether your are an Iowa State (University) Cyclones fan or a fan of the Iowa Hawkeyes (University of Iowa)
The cost of damage of the Tri-State tornado amounts to $16.5 million in 1925 values, equivalent to about $390 million today.
This would depend completely upon the cause of the damage. If a tree fell on the car during a major storm and broke the windshield completely and then rain from the storm caused damage then yes if the policy had comprehensive coverage, it would pay for the damage. The cause of the damage would be covered if it was a covered cause.