Sheep pink and purple animals
It is estimated that thousands of animals were killed during the Mt. Vesuvius eruption in 79 AD, including pets, livestock, and wildlife in the surrounding areas. The intense heat, ash, and toxic gases would have had a devastating impact on the fauna in the region.
The last eruption of Mt Hekla did not have a significant direct impact on the animals in the surrounding area as they were able to move away from the danger. However, there may have been temporary disruption to their habitats and food sources due to the ash fall and lava flows.
Animals that live on Mount St. Helens include elk, deer, mountain goats, pikas, and various bird species such as grouse and juncos. The area around the volcano has seen an increase in biodiversity since the eruption in 1980, with different species adapting to the changing landscape.
There are a variety of different lifestyle's of different animals like some animals are domestic or house animals and some animals are live stock animals some animals are wild as well.
Invertebrate animals are animals with out Backbones.
elephant
goats,deer,hanks,and verchers
Mt Waialeale in Hawaii Hawaii. It gets 460 inches of rainfall a year.
The leeward side of a mountain is the side that is not exposed to wind or rain, the other side being the windward side.
It gets an average of 426 inches of rain per year and set a record in 1982 with 683 inches of rainfall.
in Hawaii
With an average of over 472 inches or 39 feet (12 meters) of precipitation each year, Mt. Waialeale on Hawaii's Kauai Island is the rainiest and wettest spot on the planet.
Hawaii
it is located in hawaii.
The wettest state is Hawaii with about 67 inches per year. The second wettest (and wettest in continental) is Louisiana with about 58 inches per year. Mt. Waialeale on Kauai in Hawaii (about 460 inches per year) The wettest location in the continental US is Quillaylute, Washington with the rainfall of 101.7 inches a year.
With an average of over 472 inches or 39 feet (12 meters) of precipitation each year, Mt. Waialeale on Hawaii's Kauai Island is the rainiest and wettest spot on the planet.
Mt. Waialeale in Kauai, the spot gets almost 40 feet of rain annually. It is the wettest spot on Earth.