1 / 12

Defining Climate

Defining Climate. Ch. 14. 1. Climatology. Climatology : the study of Earth’s climate and factors that affect past, present, & future climate changes. Climate : long-term weather patterns of an area. Includes annual (yearly) variations of temp, precip , wind, & other weather variables.

zoe
Download Presentation

Defining Climate

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Defining Climate Ch. 14. 1

  2. Climatology • Climatology: the study of Earth’s climate and factors that affect past, present, & future climate changes. • Climate: long-term weather patterns of an area. • Includes annual (yearly) variations of temp, precip, wind, & other weather variables.

  3. Climatology • Normals: data averaged monthly or annually for 30 years & become the standard values for a location. • Data includes: high & low temp, amt. of rainfall, wind speed & direction, humidity, & air pressure. • Not intended to describe usual weather conditions.

  4. Causes of Climate • Climatic differences caused by… • Differences in latitude • Topography • Closeness of lakes & oceans • Availability of moisture • Global wind patterns • Ocean currents • Air masses

  5. Differences in Latitude • Different areas of Earth received different amounts of solar radiation because of the tilt of Earth when facing the Sun. • Creates climate zones found in each hemisphere.

  6. Latitude & Climate Zones • Tropics • Found between 23.5 North and South and the equator. • Warm nearly year-round. • Temperate Zones • Found between 23.5 and 66.5 degrees North and South of the equator. • Temperatures are moderate (warm and cold). • Polar Zones • Found between 66.5 North & South of equator to the poles. • Temperatures tend to be very cold.

  7. Climate Zones

  8. Topographical Effects • Large bodies of water affect climate. • Water heats up and cools down slower than land. • Many coastal regions are warmer in winter & cooler in summer than inland areas at similar latitudes. • Temp decreases in areas of HIGHER altitude. • Mtns are colder than sea level areas.

  9. Topographical Effects • Climates differ on either side of mtns. • Windward side: side of mtn where air rises and condenses to form clouds and drops moisture = wet & cool. • Leeward side: opposite side of windward side, air is drier & warmer as it descends = deserts are common here.

  10. Topographical Effects: Orographic Lifting

  11. Air Masses • Recall #1: Air masses have distinct regions of origin, caused by differences in amount of solar radiation. • Recall #2: Properties also depend on if they are formed over water or land. • Air masses will reflect the characteristics of that areas climate.

  12. Air Masses

More Related