Yes. But the two phenomena are not related even remotely. So if a tornado were to follow an earthquake it would be entirely by coincidence.
Potentially. It is actually fairly common for hurricanes to produce tornadoes. While tornadoes and hurricanes are weather events, earthquakes are geologic and are completely unrelated to weather. Nothing would actually prevent a hurricane or tornado from striking at the same time as an earthquake, but such an event would be entirely by coincidence and therefore extremely unlikely.
An earthquake can happen anywhere. But some places are more active than others.
The one that you are nearest to. All are dangerous depending on their location.
No. A tsunami and a tornado are two completely different things. A tsunami is a large wave or series of waves usually triggered by an underwater earthquake or landslide. A tornado is a violent vortex of air that forms during a thunderstorm. A tornado that forms on water is called a waterspout.
If two tornadoes were to merge, they would combine to form a larger and more destructive tornado. This new tornado could have stronger winds and cause more damage than either of the individual tornadoes on their own.
Lightning frequently accompanies tornadoes anyway. On the unlikely even that a tornado occurred during an earthquake, there would probably be more damage than either of the two could do on their own.
earthquake
It isn't. An earthquake releases far more energy than a tornado.
In terms of energy output an earthquake is stronger.
When you lose a loved one, when you hurt someone or something will happen that can kill you. (e.g Tornado, Earthquake, etc.)
disastrous as an earthquake/tornado...
there are no benefits to any disaster like a tornado or earthquake or floods.
3 major earthquakes and 3 tornadoes were recorded in 1925. They were: The 1925 Dali earthquake, the Charlevoix-Kamouraska earthquake and the Santa Barbra earthquake. The 1925 Miami tornado, the Southern Illinois tornado and the Tri-State tornado.
In Spanish, the word for tornado is "tornado". Same as in English, but pronounced a little differently (torr-nawh-do instead of the English way torr-nay-do). As for earthquake, the spanish word for it is "terremoto".
a hurricane or a 10. earthquake
This earthquake happen in januray 22,2009
a earthquake happens whaen a plate moves that what happen when we had the christchurch earthquake happened.