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Published byEleanore Powers Modified over 9 years ago
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Climate Regions and Influencing Factors
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Weather: the condition of the bottom layer of the earth’s atmosphere over a short time period Includes temp., precipitation, and wind Climate: the weather pattern an area typically experiences over a long time period “Climate is what you expect; weather is what you get”
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Relationship to the sun Latitude Wind & ocean currents Precipitation Water bodies & landforms Elevation
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Sun = major source of climates Greenhouse effect Small amount of sun’s radiation reaches earth Atmosphere traps heat, allowing organisms to grow Rotation : spin of the earth on its axis (24 hrs) Revolution : complete orbit around the sun (365 ¼ days) Tilt = 23 ½ degrees Area between Tropic of Cancer (23.5°N) & Tropic of Capricorn (23.5°S) receives the most direct sunlight
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Seasons North Pole tilted in towards the sun = summer in the Northern hemisphere More direct sunlight to that hemisphere Longer, warmer days Summer solstice (June 21) & winter solstice (December 21) mark the change of season Sun is directly overhead at T. of Cancer & Capricorn Vernal & autumnal equinoxes (March 21 & September 23) Sun is directly overhead at the Equator Length of day & night are near equal
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Because of tilt & path of sun’s rays, latitude impacts climate How far a place is from the Equator dictates temp. Low latitudes (0-23.5°N, 0-23.5°S) “Tropics”; hot year-round Ex: Sierra Leon (Africa) Middle latitudes (23.5-66.5°N, 23.5-66.5°S) “Temperate”; cooler than tropics, wide variety of temps Ex: Pennsylvania (U.S.) High latitudes (66.5°N-N.pole, 66.5°S-S.pole) “Polar”; consistently cold; mostly indirect sunlight Ex: Northwest Terr. (Canada)
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Sun’s heat distributed by convection Heat rises, creates circular motion Air & water moves in this way: air = wind, water = currents Wind Warm air rises (low pressure zones) & moves towards the poles; cool air sinks (high pressure zones) & moves towards the Equator *Winds are named for the direction of origin (i.e. “westerlies” come from the west)
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Ocean currents Follow similar pattern as wind Cold water moves poles Equator; warm water moves Equator poles
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Precipitation = all forms of water that fall from the atmosphere Timing & volume climate type Warm air absorbs moisture; when it cools, excess moisture condenses into liquid clouds precipitation 3 types: convectional, orographic, frontal
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Convectional Air rises because it is hot & humid cooling precipitation Common in tropical climates near the Equator Orographic Air rises because it is forced up over high landforms cooling precipitation Common in coastal areas Creates windward & leeward sides of mtn ranges Frontal Air rises because it meets a front of cooler air that pushes it up cooling precipitation
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Coastal & inland mountains Deserts Forests Even tall buildings All can change air flow, precip. patterns, & climate Water bodies Wind that crosses water takes on its temperature milder climates in nearby land areas Temp. is changed by warm or cool air & water currents
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Stronger determinant of climate than latitude in places with very high elevation Ex: Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania (4°S, >19,000 ft) Air temp. decreases ~3.5° per 1,000 ft of elevation
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