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Winds Global Winds Chapter 16 Section 3 Pages 536-544 Chapter 16 Section 3 Pages 536-544
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Global Winds Winds that blow steadily from specific directions over long distances. Caused by unequal heating of the surface.
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Global Winds
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Coriolis Effect The way Earth’s rotation makes winds curve. –Winds want to move in a straight line but the earth rotates under them, making it seem as though the wind curved.
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Coriolis Effect Northern Hemisphere- Earth rotates counter clock wise –All winds curve to the right.
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Coriolis Effect Southern Hemisphere- Earth rotates clock wise –All winds curve to the left.
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Doldrums At the equator. Area of Low Pressure –Rising Air Calm Winds
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Horse Latitudes 30°N and 30°S Area of high pressure –Sinking air Calm Winds –Sailors would get trapped and run out of food and water, they threw their horses overboard.
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Trade Winds Between the –Equator and 30°N. –Equator and 30°S Steady easterly winds. Sailors relied on them to carry goods from Europe to West Indies and S. America.
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Prevailing Westerlies Mid-latitude winds –30°N-60°N –30°S-60°S Blow from west to east. Important to our weather. Blow away from the horse latitudes.
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Polar Easterlies Between –60°N and 90°N –60°S and 90°S Cold air from the poles sinks and flows south away from the pole. Blows east to west. Cold Winds
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Jet Stream 10km above the Earth’s surface. Bands of high speed winds. –200-400km/hr Blow from west to east. They wander north and south.
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