no
No. Rivers do not have any significant affect on thunderstorms. If a thunderstorm appears to follow a river, it is by coincidence. It is also worth noting that every direction is roughly parallel to a river somewhere.
communities and health
Rainwater from thunderstorms can make its way underground and raise the water table.
The affect of rivers flooding in Mesopotamia was that the rivers would deposit silt which was very good for growing crops
lightning is an amazin specticle for most people
Blizzards, tornadoes, and thunderstorms can all cause power outages by damaging or destroying power lines.
In the simplest terms, rising masses of warm, moist air trigger thunderstorms. Tornadoes need thunderstorms to form.
Hurricanes, thunderstorms, and tornadoes can all cause damage to vegetation and man made structure through their winds. Hurricanes and thunderstorms both produce rain, which can sometimes lead to flooding. It should be noted that hurricanes produce thunderstorms and thunderstorms, including those found in hurricanes, are what produce tornadoes.
yes it does :)
Transportation and fish affect the rivers
No, rivers do not affect tornadoes.
yes, they do