Want this question answered?
Yes it would cause a nerve damage but it depends on where and how long you give mild electric shock to somebody. i think so?
A load-bearing wall itself will not cause structural damage. However, if a load-bearing wall is removed without structural replacement, yes structural damage will occur.
Bird collisions
To protect the consumer from jag legs who could cause serious damage and cause bodily harm
Most likely.
Yes, they will cause foundation problems.
Water can damage the foundations of a house and they can suffer badly from the effects if they are made of concrete. While water damage to carpets and furniture is a pain, foundations that has been damaged by standing water can be a big problem as it can affect the structure of the building. This damage caused by flooding can not only weaken the foundations but in the worst cases, potentially cause the house to become unstable.
Tornadoes cause damage through powerful winds which, on rare occasions, are strong enough to tear buildings from their foundations. Tornadoes also cause damage through the high-speed debris carried by the winds.
If the soil conditions and the foundations are poor, then vibration from heavy traffic(like trucks) can actually eventually damage your house.
Well built homes leveled but left on foundations. Weakly anchored houses blown off foundations. Trees stripped of bark. In some cases asphalt may be torn from roads.
Absolutely! serious erosion can cause your house foundation to become unstable. In severe cases, homes have been swept away into rivers or fallen down sides of cliffs. Less serious erosion damage can cause problems with basement leakage and cracked foundations.
There is no such thing as an F6 as damage maxes out at F5. F5 damage consists of the complete destruction of nearly all structures. Well-constructed houses are wiped clean off their foundations.
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.
No they did not
F5 tornadoes cause total devastation. Well constructed houses are wiped clean off their foundations and steel reinforced concrete structures are heavily damaged. In addtion, many F5 tornadoes are quite large, so major damage can cover entire neighborhoods.
Permafrost can cause architectural damage by thawing and settling, leading to foundation shifting, cracking, and structural instability. As the permafrost thaws, the soil loses its frozen support and can lead to uneven settling and potential damage to building foundations or infrastructure. This cycle of freezing and thawing can cause significant damage over time, compromising the integrity of structures built on permafrost.
An earthquake in an unpopulated area would cause little damage- in a major city, a great deal of damage.