Yes, far more. The typical tornado is a few hundred feet across. The typical hurricane is a few hundred miles across.
Hurricanes cover large areas. Tornadoes are much smaller.
Hurricanes are usually more destructive than tornadoes because they cover a much larger area and can last for days, bringing sustained winds, heavy rainfall, and storm surges that can lead to widespread flooding. In contrast, tornadoes are typically short-lived and affect a smaller geographic region, although they can cause intense localized damage. The combination of prolonged impact and extensive reach makes hurricanes more devastating overall.
Hurricanes are much larger than tornadoes, and thus cause damage over a larger area, meaning more homes destroyed, and more people in harm's way. Tornado damage can be more severe, but it is localized along a rather narrow path.
They often do as they cover a larger area and often cause flooding in addition to wind damage. The costliest tornado in U.S. history, the Joplin tornado of 2011, cost $2.8 billion. The costliest hurricane in U.S. history, Hurricane Katrina, cost $105 billion.
Yes, but the chances of such an occurrence are extremely low. Hurricanes often produce tornadoes, but more often in their outer regions beyond the area of hurricane conditions (sustained winds of at least 74 mph). Hurricanes and tornadoes are not related to earthquakes in any way known to science. Many area that are prone to large earthquakes to not typically see hurricanes or tornadoes very often.
Hurricanes cover a larger area than tornadoes. Both hurricanes and tornadoes can be deadly, although hurricanes are more likely to cause widespread destruction due to their larger size and duration. Both hurricanes and tornadoes have strong winds, but hurricanes typically have more sustained, powerful winds over a larger region.
Hurricanes cover large areas. Tornadoes are much smaller.
Tornadoes are very destructive along a narrow path of land, but hurricans cover a much larger area.
Hurricanes cover larger areas than tornadoes. Hurricanes are large, rotating storms that can span hundreds of miles, affecting wide regions with strong winds and heavy rain. Tornadoes, on the other hand, are usually much smaller in size with a narrow path of destruction, affecting a more localized area.
One is not necessarily deadlier, as in both hurricanes an tornadoes, some kill more than others, and many do not kill at all. However, in terms of the highest death toll, hurricanes kill more people. This is largely due to the fact that they cover a larger area, giving them more opportunity to kill.
In short, tornadoes are more violent than hurricanes and usually produce more severe damage, albeit over a much smaller area.
Hurricanes are usually more destructive than tornadoes because they cover a much larger area and can last for days, bringing sustained winds, heavy rainfall, and storm surges that can lead to widespread flooding. In contrast, tornadoes are typically short-lived and affect a smaller geographic region, although they can cause intense localized damage. The combination of prolonged impact and extensive reach makes hurricanes more devastating overall.
This cannot be answered simply, as both hurricanes and tornadoes vary greatly in how bad they are. The impacts of both tornadoes and hurricanes can range from negligible to devastating. That said, the very worst hurricanes can be far deadlier and more destructive than the worst tornadoes.
Hurricanes cover a larger area than tornadoes. Hurricanes are large, rotating storm systems that can span hundreds of miles and affect entire states or regions, while tornadoes are much smaller in scale, typically only a few hundred feet wide and a few miles long.
Tornadoes can occur in hurricanes, but they are not required for a hurricane to form. Tornadoes in hurricanes tend to be weaker and more short-lived compared to those in severe thunderstorms. The conditions within a hurricane can sometimes spawn tornadoes, particularly in the outer rain bands.
There are more tornadoes in Alabama compared to hurricanes. Alabama is part of a region known as Tornado Alley, which experiences multiple tornadoes each year. Hurricanes are less common in Alabama, but the state can still be impacted by hurricanes that make landfall along the Gulf Coast.
Hurricanes are much larger than tornadoes, and thus cause damage over a larger area, meaning more homes destroyed, and more people in harm's way. Tornado damage can be more severe, but it is localized along a rather narrow path.