In earthquakes buildings are damaged from a combination of shaking and the ground there are set into being distorted. In cases of minor damage there may be cracks in the walls and furniture and appliances may be knocked over. Interior and exterior walls typically take equal amounts of damage
In cases of more severe damage a structure may partially or completely collapse.
earthquakes also often disrupt underground utilities, breaking gas pipes, water mains, and underground power lines.
In tornadoes buildings damage is done be very strong winds and debris carried by those winds. Minor to moderate tornado damage is almost exclusively done to the exterior of a building. Such damage includes loss of roofing material, gutters, and siding and broken windows. Stronger tornadoes may result in the removal of the roof, and possibly the collapse of some walls, with exterior walls and upper-story walls usually failing first. Very violent tornadoes can completely level most buildings, with debris blown downwind. Sometimes entire buildings can swept off their foundations.
Tornadoes usually do not have significant effect underground, but utility poles are easily toppled and destroyed buildings may leave broken gas lines.
Only in the amount of damage they can cause
Tornado damage is caused by wind and debris, with the first visible damage usually occurring to the roof, windows, and exterior walls. Earthquake damage is caused by shaking and distortion of the ground. Structures destroyed by earthquakes usually collapses where they stand while those destroyed by tornadoes are often at least partially blown away.
It depends on the size of the tornado and the how strong the earthquake is. Most earthquakes are small on average, so most of the time a tornado is stronger.
Although they are driven by completely different mechanisms, both earthquakes and tornadoes are natural disasters that strike suddenly and are difficult if not impossible to predict. with a tornado you usually get a few minutes warning. With an earthquake there is no warning.
Yes. Tornadoes and earthquakes are two completely different things. A tornado is a violently rotating column of air extending from the base of a thunderstorm to the ground. It causes damage with its powerful winds and debris carried by those winds. An earthquake is a shaking of the earth's crust. They cause damage by shaping, warping, liquefying, and fracturing the ground beneath buildings.
Both tornadoes and earthquakes can damage or destroy buildings and infrastructure and can kill and injure people. However they cause damage in different ways.
A hurricane
Only in the amount of damage they can cause
tsunami
There is no difference. A tornado and a twister are the same thing.
Minor tornado damage typically includes missing shingles, damaged siding, and downed gutters. Minor Earthquake damage would included cracks in walls. More severe tornado damage would include the removal of the roof and sometimes walls with some debris blown down wind. Earthquake damage might include partial collapse and/or damaged supports. In the very strongest of tornadoes structures can be torn clean off their foundations, and are sometimes carried significant distances. The very strongest of earthquakes will cause most structures to completely collapse, leaving behind piles of rubble.
The rating on the Fujita or F scale of a tornado is determined by the severity of the damage it causes. Different levels of tornado have different levels of damage severity, ranging from the minor damage of an F0 tornado the the total destruction of an F5.
An 8.5 Earthquake is MUCH larger and does more damage.
Tornado damage is caused by wind and debris, with the first visible damage usually occurring to the roof, windows, and exterior walls. Earthquake damage is caused by shaking and distortion of the ground. Structures destroyed by earthquakes usually collapses where they stand while those destroyed by tornadoes are often at least partially blown away.
tornados can cause the fastes damage , if i had to list them i would say 1. TORNADO(IT CAN DESTROY ALOT IN A COUPLE OF MINUTES) 2.EARTHQUAKE(IT CAN SHAKE A LARGE AREA BUT NOT ALWAYS CAUSE THAT MUCH OF A DAMAGE AS a tornado could) 3.HURRICANE
There are a few big hitters when it comes to violent weather, but it all depends on the scale of how violent these individual weather patterns are. For instance, a violent tornado can do more damage than a light earthquake, but a violent earthquake can do more damage than a light tornado.
earthquake