The fastest winds on earth occur in tornadoes. On rare occasions these winds can exceed 300 mph (480 km/h).
The fastest winds on earth occur in violent tornadoes.
Mountains. a hurricane
In the eye wall
A strong wind that can bring heavy rain
tornadoes have the strongest wind
Tornado
Cold fronts cause violent weather, including heavy rain, strong winds, and thunderstorms.
Humid Continental or Dfa
A tornado is a type of storm. A storm is characterized by strong winds, heavy or dangerous precipitation, thunder and lightning, or some combination of those. A tornado produces the fastest winds of any storm on earth.
The key on a weather map tells you the what the colors on the map stand for, such as the type of precipation, whether the precipation is light, medium, heavy, etc., and the codes for any other weather events, such as strong winds, severe weather, etc. the map shows.
Trade Winds.
high winds and cold weather
Hfc
Wildfires can happen in almost any weather. The worst weather is when there has been no rain, dry heat, and winds. This is a major concern due to the dryness of the area and with the winds how fast it can and will spread.
it affects climate because it affects weather. it cools off the temprature. prevailing winds also move clouds which affects weather.
The type of cloud produces heavy rain lightning thunder hail and strong wind is called cumulonimbus.
Cold fronts cause violent weather, including heavy rain, strong winds, and thunderstorms.
Being a coastal community, the weather is humid most of the year accompanied by winds on most days and of course, fog.
Tornadoes produce very violent winds, but aside from and do not cause other forms of weather. They are more of a product of different types of weather than a cause.
The Moon has no weather, because it has no atmosphere. In order for there to be winds, there has to be a media of some type for the combination of temperatures and moisture to create weather. Jupiter on the other hand has some terrific storms!
Humid Continental or Dfa
The type of weather results you get when the warm waters of the Gulf Stream meet with cold wind is fog.steam????Nearly right ! The answer is fog.
Harold Stevens Ayer has written: 'The response of mountain and valley winds to changes of synoptic weather type in an area of complex topography' -- subject(s): Winds