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10 answers

It depends whether the hurricane occurs on the northern or southern hemisphere. Due to the Coriolis-force, winds will move therefor move counter clockwise on the northern hemisphere, and clockwise on the southern hemisphere.

2006-10-02 21:51:50 · answer #1 · answered by Jens F 2 · 1 0

Anti-clockwise

2006-10-03 04:21:04 · answer #2 · answered by AKL 3 · 0 0

Counter clockwise

2006-10-03 04:22:40 · answer #3 · answered by AboAyman 5 · 0 0

A Hurricane moves counter-clockwise in the Northern Hemishere and clockwise in the southern hemishere (below the equator.) Just like water leaving your sink or tub down the drain.

2006-10-03 21:09:24 · answer #4 · answered by phoenix 3 · 1 0

Depends. In the northern hemisphere it's counter-clockwise. In the southern hemisphere it's clockwise!

2006-10-03 07:18:21 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Looking from the top down counter clockwise.

2006-10-03 04:15:33 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

depends how you define Hurricane. If you mean the ones America have, its Anit Clockwise
Hurricane can also mean Typhoon(found near Japan) and Tropical Cyclone(southern Hemisphere). in the southern hemisphere it is Clockwise

2006-10-03 05:52:39 · answer #7 · answered by Katy H 2 · 0 0

If you look at the storm from the top (ie from space )it is counter cloakwise in the northern hemisphere and cloakwise in the southern hemisphere

2006-10-03 13:11:32 · answer #8 · answered by Arasan 7 · 0 0

A hurricane is an intense large scale low pressure system. As such the flow is counter-clocks-wise.

2006-10-03 05:34:10 · answer #9 · answered by tambraei 2 · 0 0

Hurricane winds sometimes reverse themselves as the storm weakens..........

2006-10-03 04:25:16 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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