From the reference: No, it's actually impossible for two or more hurricanes to merge together. But if two hurricanes or tropical storms do come close together, they can interact with one another. Their close proximity may weaken one or both of the storms. Or they may begin circling around each other. This is called the Fujiwhara effect, named after a Japanese meteorologist who first explained the phenomenon. 5 days ago Source(s): http://www.wxdude.com/tropical.html
No. Ohio is too far from the ocean to get hurricanes. It does sometimes get the remnants of them, though
Oregon gets floods and tornadoes, but rarely, if ever gets hurricanes.
It is highly unlikely as California is not prone to hurricanes and the mountains between Moreno Valley and the Pacific ocean will take most of the strength out of a storm.
Overall the worst hurricanes are worse. There have been quite a few hurricanes that have claimed over 1,000 lives, but only one known tornado holds this distinction. Additionally, there have been several hurricanes with damage costs in the tens of billions of dollars, while no single tornado has ever cost more than $3 billion.
It has rained animals before. Tornados or strong winds pick them up and drop them down when it ends.
Cyclone is generally the name given to the violent meteorological disturbances that occur in the southern hemisphere. The northern hemisphere terms for cyclones are typhoons (in Asian waters) and hurricanes (in the Americas). No hurricane has ever made landfall on the western coast of USA (including California) in recorded history.
No, All hurricanes have different names and do not repeat the same name.
Tornadoes have touched down in California. Though "landfall" is not the correct temr unless it is a waterspout moving onto land.
That is impossible to determine. Hurricanes have been going on since long before there were people around to record them, and even then there are many historical accounts of storms that may or may not have been hurricanes.
Yes, Connecticut has had both tornadoes and hurricanes.
No hurricanes ever hit Arizona.
No country. Hurricanes have been ocurring since long before any civilization was built.
No. Ohio is too far from the ocean to get hurricanes. It does sometimes get the remnants of them, though
Yes.
No, because F5 is a rating for tornadoes, not hurricanes. To date there has never been a recorded F5 tornado in Florida. However, Florida was hit by two category 5 hurricanes: The Labor Day hurricane of 1935 and Hurricane Andrew in 1992.
I don't know. that's why im looking for the answer
Oregon gets floods and tornadoes, but rarely, if ever gets hurricanes.