Haikal Hugo Ghani - C11.2020.02242 - Unit 7

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NAME : HAIKAL HUGO GHANI

NIM : C11.2020.02242

7.1

1. Paragraph 1
natural disaster is everyone’s worst nightmare.
2. Paragraph 2
To improve weather forecasting and safety, there have always been people who like to
observe and track the weather specially tornadoes.
3. Paragraph 3
How to tornadoes can be devil with it a supercell thunderstorm, lightning, torrential rain,
and, at times, hailstones as big as baseballs.
4. Paragraph 4
Tornadoes are unpredictable in size, shape, and behavior.
5. Paragraph 5
Most hurricanes die at sea, but if sufficiently fueled with moisture and driven by tremendous
winds, all hell breaks loose when they hit land.
6. Paragraph 6
Over the past 20 years, extreme weather has become a media spectacle.
7. Paragraph 7
Passion to be a storm chaser, photographer and journalist about storm.
8. Paragraph 8
According to a 2010 World Meteorological Organization study, one-third fewer hurricanes
have been predicted.

7.2

1. They can be 300 feet to two miles wide


2. Heads of tornadoes can be shaped like pancakes, anvils, or wedges with long, straight or
bent tails that resemble ropes, drill bits, stovepipes, elephant trunks, or cones.
3. They can be black or white, or take on the color of the soil that whirls up off the ground.
4. They can occur singly or in deadly sequence.
5. Spin at 261 to 381 miles per hour, and last for minutes or hours.
6. The mid-1950s
7. the hot air and cold air force the tropical air to rise rapidly, creating an updraft that sucks
condensation into the atmosphere. This moisture climbs tens of thousands of feet, forming a
huge cumulonimbus cloud. At the base of the cloud, winds blow from different directions at
varying speeds and elevations, and exert forces on the saturated air inside the cloud until
the air begins to spin in a clockwise direction. At the top of the cloud, cooling moisture turns
to ice crystals, and the entire structure—called a supercell thunderstorm—lets loose with
thunder, lightning, torrential rain, and, at times, hailstones as big as baseballs.
8. Tornadoes form over land, hurricanes are born over water

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