5 feet
A hurricane can result when an upper level high pressure area filled with moisture rides over a lower level low pressure area. The the water temperature should generally be over 76 degrees Fahrenheit. When those conditions are just right, a hurricane can form. If the water is too cold, it will usually not form but can continue to exist. If there is not high pressure above the storm, it will usually dissipate. If it is dry, then it will not have moisture to create the heat to drive the storm. It needs ideal conditions.
Faker
22.2 Metres
its called hurricane by Faker
A water level indicator shows how high the water is.
Find some high ground, about 200 feet higher than sea level
water always flows from high level to low level. Also in drainage the principle is high level to low level....
Yes. The moon is the primary factor in the tides. High tides are highest and low tides are lowest during a full moon and a new moon. Hurricane Sandy made landfall in the U.S. at high tide during a full moon. As a result, the already large storm surge cam in on top of an already high water level from the tide.
High winds do cause more damage
As an adjective, it would be spelled hyphenated (e.g. high-level meetings), but otherwise high is an adjective describing a level (e.g. water at a high level).
No, a hurricane forms over warm ocean waters when conditions are favorable for its development, such as light winds and high humidity. The interaction between hot and cold water alone does not directly lead to the formation of a hurricane.
Well, there are several hurricanes, each with its own level of intensity. The hurricane with the most damage was hurricane Katrina, which hit the USA in 2005 as a category 3 hurricane. Katrina's death toll was pretty high, t officially 1,836. The deadliest Atlantic hurricane in history was the Great Hurricane of 1780, which killed at least 22,000.