yes
Mount Ruapehu in New Zealand's largest active volcano (or stratovolcano). It began erupting 250,000 years ago. Ruapehu has had minor eruptions at least sixty times since 1945. It's major eruptions occur around fifty years apart.
The correct way to ask that would be either:"Why does a phenomenon occur?" or"Why do phenomena occur?"
They usually occur in desert or places on the equator.
11 September 2001 occur
When an earthquake happens near an ocean the ocean can form a tsunami. Earthquakes result from seismic activity beneath the Earth's surface - sometimes terrestrial, sometimes submarine. Tsunamis occur most often along countries which border the Pacific "Rim of Fire", or "Ring of Fire'. One end of this region of high sesmic and volcanic activity begins at New zealand, heading northwest to Indonesia (completely bypassing Australia) and then west to Papua New guinea and Indonesia, northeast along the Asian coastline, east to North America and then south along the western North American coastline. Roughly horse-shoe shaped, the Ring of Fire extends about 40,000km long, and tsunamis can be generated anywhere along this rim.
Yes. The majority of the deaths from the eruption of Krakatoa were from a tsunami.
Mount Vesuvius is well due for another massive eruptions which is why they are constantly monitering it and have an emergency 7 day evacuation plan.
most tsunami occur at the sea.
An earthquake caused the Sumatra Tsunami.
2004
The most famous eruption occurred in 79 AD. I think that is the one you're asking about. However, there were earlier eruptions that might be argued as more destruction. I think one in the bronze age wiped out more area.
No type of cloud is associated with tusnamis, as a tsunami is not a weather-related phenonomenon. A tsunami can occur during absolutely any type of weather.
There is no way of knowing when the next tsunami will occur.
It is impossible to predict when a tsunami will occur until it actually starts.
2006
japan
Earthquake