Yes. Hurricanes are atmospheric phenomena that are cause by certain weather conditions.
Hurricanes are weather events.
No. Hurricanes are a weather phenomenon.
No hurricanes are caused by weather, which is inorganic.
No, cold weather does not cause hurricanes. Hurricanes form over warm ocean waters. Temperature contrasts between warm and cold air masses can influence the strength and path of hurricanes, but cold weather itself does not create hurricanes.
Hurricanes are produce by weather phenomena, though geologic features can influence them.
Hurricanes don't exist on their own they are formed by the pressure provided by the continuous changing in weather
Hurricanes are weather events.
Hurricanes are a weather phenomenon and thus have a cause rooted in weather.
Yes, hurricanes are formed in the troposphere, which is the lowest layer of Earth's atmosphere where weather events occur. Hurricanes develop from clusters of thunderstorms over warm ocean water when the right conditions of warm sea surface temperatures and low wind shear are present.
Storm surges are formed during hurricanes.
No. Hurricanes are a weather phenomenon.
Hurricanes should be an weather related and geologic in nature
No hurricanes are caused by weather, which is inorganic.
No, cold weather does not cause hurricanes. Hurricanes form over warm ocean waters. Temperature contrasts between warm and cold air masses can influence the strength and path of hurricanes, but cold weather itself does not create hurricanes.
no
Hurricanes are produce by weather phenomena, though geologic features can influence them.
No. Hurricanes cannot produce islands of solid rock. Bermuda was formed by a now extinct volcano.