Environmental Sciences, asked by ambikachinni65, 2 months ago

Heavy rains and wind

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Answered by himadrisharma2007
0

Answer:

It is defined as rainfall greater than 100 mm in 24 hours. ... In New Zealand, heavy rainfall is relatively common. Often, a significant amount of precipitation occurs in only a few hours, leading to severe flooding and landslide risk.Another way to describe heavy rain is the phrase 'tipping down'. ... For the rain to be 'spitting' it means it's just starting. Bucketing down. Similar to tipping down, bucketing down is another way to describe heavy rain.More heavy rain is one of the hallmark signs of climate change. As the atmosphere warms, more water evaporates from soils, plants, lakes, and oceans. So when this additional water vapor condenses into precipitation, it leads to heavier rain — or when cold enough, heavier snow. ...Heavy rain can damage or destroy infrastructure, homes, and businesses. It jeopardizes public health, washing sewage into waterways, kicking up polluting sediments, and creating habitats for disease-carrying insects.Rainfall is very important for the survival of plants and animals. It brings fresh water to the earth's surface. If rainfall is less, there is water scarcity which sometime causes drought like situation. If there is excess rain, floods take place which make the life of the affected people miserable.Examples of rain metaphors include "pouring rain," "rain washed light," "rain dancing across the meadow" and "rain soaked skin." A metaphor is a figure of speech using words in ways that are not literal. For example, rain doesn't literally pour from the sky, wash light, dance or soak through skin.

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Answered by srivastavayash601
0

Answer:

heavy rain and wind is strom . that is seen in coastal area . if my answer is correct follow

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