A "typoon" (as you put it) is a massive wave, same as a tsunami. A "hurrican" is a storm caused by warm and cold fronts mixing together, with the ability to travel over 213 mph.
No. Hurricane Katrina dissipated in 2005 and will never return. Hurricane Sandy occurred seven years after Katrina and is a completely different storm.
A tornado and a hurricane cannot "combine" as they operate on different scales. It is fairly common for tornadoes to produce tornadoes.
yes because when a hurricane hits a place the people have to migrate to a different place because the hurricane destroyed there homes.
There is no record of a hurricane named Lori. It is possible that a storm with a different name or spelling may have been confused for Lori.
It is not possible for a tornado and a hurricane to occur simultaneously in the same location. Tornadoes can occur within hurricanes, but they typically form in different ways and under different conditions. Hurricane-force winds can cause tornadoes to develop in the outer bands of the storm.
A typoon is a hurricane. The typhoon destroyed the tiny village.
each hurricane has a different scale and mass.
typoon
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Hurricane refers to one Hurricane, While Hurricanes refers to two or more hurricanes.
Global Warming
No. Hurricane Katrina dissipated in 2005 and will never return. Hurricane Sandy occurred seven years after Katrina and is a completely different storm.
They are different because, they are all formed differently.
A cyclone occurs over water. A hurricane occurs over land.
Hurricane Kaylee has not been used as an official name for any tropical cyclone in the Atlantic basin. It is possible that the name Kaylee was used in a different region or for a different year outside of the Atlantic hurricane naming lists.
They will make multiple passes through different parts of the hurricane at different heights, from about 500 feet to 10,000 feet. This is usually between 5 and 10 times I believe.
The term hurricane would be used for major storms in Honduras, but a hurricane and a typhoon are just different names for the same thing, used in different parts of the world.