Hurricanes get bigger and stronger over water that is over 79 degrees F
hurricanes
Hurricanes do not typically occur in the Antarctic region. Hurricanes are more common in tropical and subtropical regions where warm ocean waters fuel their development. The unique climate and geography of Antarctica do not provide the necessary conditions for hurricanes to form.
Hurricanes cover a larger area than tornadoes. Both hurricanes and tornadoes can be deadly, although hurricanes are more likely to cause widespread destruction due to their larger size and duration. Both hurricanes and tornadoes have strong winds, but hurricanes typically have more sustained, powerful winds over a larger region.
No, the Mediterranean does not typically experience hurricanes.
No, Minnesota does not experience hurricanes due to its location far inland from the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico where hurricanes typically form. Minnesota may experience severe storms and tornadoes, but not hurricanes.
A cyclone is another word for a tornado, so no hurricanes are bigger
No. While Mitch was one of the deadliest hurricanes other hurricanes have been much bigger.
Almost all hurricanes are bigger than Rhode Island
It is very dangerous. According to the speed. The bigger the level the more dangerous it is
air pushes the tide ; making it bigger
warm ocean water was make it develope to become stronger and bigger.
A twister is a tornado. A hurricane is bigger and entirely different type of storm.
Intensity has little to do with the size of the hurricane, and in fact some of the strongest hurricanes (like Andrew) have been quite compact.
the tsunami will get bigger every second and all the boats and ships will be destroyed because tsunamis are as strong as 60 hurricanes.
it happened like normal hurricanes happen, but instead of getting smaller when hitting land, it somehow got bigger, scientists are working it out.
NO!! Hurricanes can extend over several hundreds of miles. Tornadoes are a very localised event.
Many tornadoes have a structure similar to the eye of a hurricane, but the only true eyes are in tropical cyclones. In Tornadoes and other storms it is called a weak echo region.