There is no such thing as "earthquake weather." Tornadoes and hurricanes are both violent storms and therefore forms of extreme weather. Earthquakes are geologic events and are not weather-related.
In Spanish, the word for tornado is "tornado". Same as in English, but pronounced a little differently (torr-nawh-do instead of the English way torr-nay-do). As for earthquake, the spanish word for it is "terremoto".
It could be any of a whirlwind, tornado, hurricane, cyclone, twister, vortex or dust devil.
Nashville, Tennessee has had tornadoes, but it is too far inland to get hurricanes.
No, tornadoes are triggered by interactions of air currents, which are essentially unaffected by earthquakes.
Lightning frequently accompanies tornadoes anyway. On the unlikely even that a tornado occurred during an earthquake, there would probably be more damage than either of the two could do on their own.
earthquake
A hurricane
a hurricane or a 10. earthquake
A forest fire, Earthquake, Tornado, Hurricane. Basically, anything that disturbs or damages. A forest fire, Earthquake, Tornado, Hurricane. Basically, anything that disturbs or damages.
tornado,earthquake,hurricane, and blizzard
In terms of energy output an earthquake is the most powerful.
A demographic disaster is when a huge area is destroyed by something. This could be a tornado, hurricane, or earthquake.
A demographic disaster is when a huge area is destroyed by something. This could be a tornado, hurricane, or earthquake.
Hurricane Blizzard Tornado Flood Earthquake
The one that you are nearest to. All are dangerous depending on their location.
Floods can add sediments and nutrients to soil.
No. In terms of wind speed a tornado is the strongest. In terms of energy released and earthquake is the strongest.