i doubt it. There avergly around 200
No, the fastest winds in a tornado every recorded was 301mph. that was the Oklahoma tornado of 1999
There were several tropical storms named Eric, but none reached hurricane strength.
No. The largest tornado ever recorded was 2.5 miles wide, and only a handful of tornadoes over 2 miles wide have ever been recorded. The smallest hurricane ever recorded was 60 miles wide, with most hurricanes being a few hundred miles wide.
By some estimates it is the largest recorded Atlantic hurricane with a gale diameter of nearly 950 miles.
There was a Hurricane Suzanne in the Atlantic Ocean in 1984. It reached Category 4 intensity but did not make landfall, instead dissipating over open waters.
No, that would be a tornado. The smallest hurricane ever recorded was about 60 miles (97 kilometers) in diameter. The average hurricane is 300 miles (480 kilometers) in diameter.
Yes, there was a hurricane named Patty. Hurricane Patty occurred in October 2012 and was a short-lived tropical storm that formed in the Atlantic Ocean. It reached hurricane status briefly before dissipating and did not make landfall.
Sort of. There was a Severe Tropical Cyclone Gina in the South Pacific Ocean in 2003. It is really the same thing as a hurricane, but under a different name. Gina reached an intensity equivalent to a category 2 hurricane.
There is probably a tornado season, as that part of the world does get tornadoes. Uruguay does not, however, have a hurricane season. Only one storm in recorded history has ever reached hurricane intensity in the South Atlantic, and it hit Brazil.
No, Hurricane Alec was initially classified as a tropical storm but never reached hurricane status. It weakened and dissipated over the open waters of the Atlantic Ocean without posing a significant threat to land.
The most intense hurricane ever recorded was Hurricane Patricia in 2015, with a minimum central pressure of 872 mb and maximum sustained winds of 215 mph. The largest hurricane in terms of diameter was Hurricane Ginny in 1963, which had tropical storm force winds extending 970 miles in diameter. In terms of damage and impact, Hurricane Katrina in 2005 was one of the most dangerous hurricanes in U.S. history, causing widespread devastation along the Gulf Coast.
All weather events including hurricanes have been a natural part of our atmospheric processes since the planet formed. We can not say therefore where the first ever hurricane was located and if we could the answer would be meaningless as plate tectonics, continental drift and geological process would have moved or indeed destroyed the location over geological time.