The Cyclone that hit Vera was in Japan
Cyclone Tracy was a category 4 cyclone which struck the city of Darwin, in Australia's Northern Territory, in the early hours of Christmas Day 1974.
Cyclone Tracy made landfall at Darwin in the early hours of Christmas morning, 25 December 1974.
Cyclone Yasi struck on February 2, 2011. It made landfall in northeastern Queensland, Australia, bringing severe winds and heavy rainfall. The cyclone was classified as a category 5 system, causing significant damage to infrastructure and agriculture in the region.
The deadliest tropical cyclone on record (the generic term for a storm such as a hurricane) was the Bhola Cyclone. It hit Bangladesh (then called East Pakistan) and eastern India in November of 1970, killing at least 300,000 people.
Yes, Cyclone Tracy was a tropical cyclone.
There is no such thing as a "mixture" of the two. Cyclones and earthquakes are completely unrelated. While it would be possible, however unlikely, for an earthquake and a cyclone to strike the same area at the same time by chance, such an incident would simply be two events that happen to occur at the same time.
Cyclone Selma came before Cyclone Tracy.
No. Cyclone Tracy was an a very intense but abnormally small cyclone.
cyclone travis
Harold L. Crutcher has written: 'Selected meridional cross sections of heights, temperatures, and dew points of the Northern Hemisphere' -- subject(s): Charts, diagrams, Climatology 'Atlantic tropical cyclone strike probabilities' -- subject(s): Cyclone forecasting, Meteorology, Tables 'North Indian tropical cyclone strike probabilities' -- subject(s): Cyclones, Probability forecasts (Meteorology), Storms 'Upper wind statistics charts of the Northern Hemisphere' -- subject(s): Charts, diagrams, Meteorology, Winds 'South Indian tropical cyclone strike probabilities' -- subject(s): Cyclones, Probability forecasts (Meteorology), Storms 'Selected level heights, temperatures and dew points for the Northern Hemisphere' -- subject(s): Atmospheric pressure, Atmospheric temperature, Charts, diagrams, Dew, Mathematical models, Meteorology
Yes, thunder and lightning can occur in a cyclone due to the intense convection and strong winds within the storm. The lightning is caused by the collision of ice particles in the clouds, and the thunder is the sound waves produced by the rapid heating and cooling of the air around the lightning strike.