Typhoons can be important environmentally because they carry heat energy and water from tropical areas to higher latitudes, and sometimes to locations that otherwise would be much colder and/or much drier.
they are not, there useless and kill people! :(
once the the typhoons get to 74 miles per hour it can be classified as a hurrcane or a monsoon.
Because we filipinos don't care whether our life is on the line, the important thing is we saved or at least tried to save a life. Matapang means brave. We are matapang not only on typhoons but on other stuff
Typhoons weaken when the make land-fall - because they lose the 'fuel' of the storm. Typhoons are fuelled by the moisture they 'suck up' from the ocean. once over land, they lose the source of their power - and eventually die.
No. Typhoons and hurricanes are basically the same thing. The only differences is in where they occur. Hurricanes are in the Atlantic or eastern Pacific while typhoons are in the western Pacific
Yes, quite easily. Typhoons are large storm systems that are plainly visible from space. With our satellite and modern forecasting we know about typhoons before they even become typhoons.
there are hot air at the sky , then it started to turn round and round in wind, that's how typhoons made.
Typhoons cannot be prevented.
No, typhoons are a southeast Asia phenomena.
Typhoons do hit land.
Yes typhoons travel
Typhoons can deliver much needed rain to a region.
meteorologists name typhoons in alphabetical order
No. Typhoons are tropical storms. Antarctica is a polar desert.
6 typhoons hit Guam: pongsona, paka, karen, cha'tan, pamela, and omar.
Typhoons can destroy homes and buildings
The noun 'typhoon' is a count noun, the plural form is 'typhoons'. There can be one typhoon, several typhoons, or a series of typhoons.
During the 2006 season, eleven typhoons entered the Philippines. Of those, 8 were super typhoons. Six tropical storms or tropical depressions hit the Philippines in 2006, in addition to the typhoons.
They do. But they are not called typhoons there. They are called intense tropical cyclones.