Title: Chapter 2: Weather and Climate
1Introduction to GeographyPeople, Places, and
Environment, 6eCarl DahlmanWilliam H. Renwick
- Chapter 2 Weather and Climate
- Holly Barcus
- Morehead State University
- And Joe Naumann
- UMSL
2Weather Climate affect us in many ways
3Major Factor in Habitability of Areas
- Affects human comfort levels
- Affects the costs of living and working in an
area extremely high cost of mineral extraction
in mineral-rich Siberia - Affects the agricultural products that can be
produced
4Weather and Climate
- Weather
- Day-to-day variations in temperature and
precipitation - Climate
- Statistical summary of weather conditions through
time - Definition The average yearly pattern of
precipitation and temperature.
5Weather Conditions
- Examples storms, temperature
- Movement of energy
- Fundamental features of Earths surface
- Regulate natural systems
- Limit human use of environment
6Weather Climate
- Whereas climate is the average annual pattern of
precipitation and temperatures for an area,
weather is the momentary, and very temporary,
condition of the atmosphere. - Weather is experienced moment by moment
- To experience the climate of an area, one must
live there for many years. To truly experience
climate, one must experience the extremes as well
as the averages.
7Solar Energy
- Radiant energy from sun (insolation)
- Powers circulation of atmosphere and oceans and
supports life on Earth - Varies across Earths surface
8Insolation
- Amount of energy intercepted by Earth
- 2 factors
- Intensity of solar radiation
- Duration of sunlight
9Intensity of Solar Radiation
- Angle of incidence
- Varies daily seasonally
- Axial tilt 23.5 degrees
- Lower angle larger area lesser intensity
- Higher angle smaller area greater intensity
10Earth-Sun Relationships Click the Stonehenge
picture below to see video
- Even in ancient times, humans were able to
observe that the relationship differed from day
to day in a cycle.
11Air Temperature
- Earth Inclination (23.5º tilt of the axis is
responsible for the seasons and redistributing
the heat energy received) - Reflection and Reradiation human actions can
affect this - The Lapse Rate 3.5 per 1000 feet
- Decrease with ascent
- Increase with descent
12Latitude
- Sun is directly overhead at the equator
- March Equinox March 20 or 21
- September Equinox Sept. 20 or 21
- June Solstice June 20 or 21
- Tropic of Cancer
- December Solstice
- Tropic of Capricorn
- Hemispherically Correct Terminology used above
13Earth Inclination (tilt of axis)
- 23½ tilt from the vertical.
- Check Tropics of Cancer Capricorn
- Check Arctic Antarctic Circles
- Relationship or coincidence?
14Length of Day
- Total heat received by a place is dependent upon
the number of hours of sunlight and its intensity
(angle of inclination) - Equator
- Higher latitudes
15Seasonal change in insolation in the middle
latitudes
- The angle at which the suns rays strike the
earth change from day to day as a result of the
tilt of the earths axis, not because the sun
moves.
North of the Tropic of Cancer and south of the
Tropic of Capricorn, the rays never strike at a
right angle (perpendicular)
16What if the axis were perpendicular?
17Seasonal Variation in Radiation
- Varies because of angle of incidence, day length,
distance from sun - Equator
- High latitudes
- Temperature
18Tilt of the Earths Axis --
- Responsible for changing lengths of days
throughout the year - Responsible for seasons
- Responsible for variability of insolation
Helps redistribute and moderate temperatures
keeping the tropics from being even hotter and
the poles colder.
19Energy Balance
20Solar Heat Storage
- Heat is absorbed by and released from objects
- Water absorbs and releases more heat than land
- Land heats and cools more quickly and to a
greater extent than water - Water is a moderating influence on temperatures
21Differential Heating of Land and Water
22Adiabatic Process
- Water vapor in the atmosphere affects the
heating/cooling rate of air - Latent heat (stored in water vapor) affects
temperatures - Latent heat exchange (transfer of heat from lower
altitudes to higher ones) is very important in
causing precipitation.
23The Three States of Water
24Adiabatic Process Video click the thermometer to
see the video
- For our purposes, we will only consider the dry
lapse rate. - 3.5F increase per 1000 foot decrease.
- 3.5F decrease per 1000 foot increase
25Heat Transfer
- Responsible for movement of energy from place to
place on Earth - Radiation (radiant energy)
- Electromagnetic waves
- Heat (short waves converted to long waves)
- 2 wavelengths Short (sun - light) and long
(Earth - heat)
26Greenhouse Effect
- Short vs. long waves
- Greenhouse gases
- Critical to heat exchange
- Water vapor, carbon dioxide, ozone, methane
- Increased greenhouse gases increased global
warming
27Greenhouse Effect
- Click the greenhouse to see the video
28Greenhouse effect Global Warming
- Click the greenhouse to see the video
29Latent Heat Exchange
- Transfers energy from low to high latitudes
- Causes precipitation
- Two types
- Sensible
- Detectable by touch
- Latent
- In storage in water and water vapor
- Latent heat exchange (adiabatic process)
30Heat Exchange Atmospheric Circulation
- Convection
- Upward movement of fluids caused by heating
- Boiling water
- Atmosphere
- Advection
- Horizontal
- movement of air
- Monsoons
31Wind Definition
- Wind is the horizontal movement of air from a
high pressure area to a low pressure area.
32Sea Breeze
- Warm air over land rises (low)
- Sea Breeze moves inland
- Cumuli develop aloft and move seaward
- Upper level return land breeze
- Cool air aloft sinks over water (high)
- Sea Breeze (meso-cold) Front
33Land Breeze
- Cool air over land sinks (high)
- Land Breeze moves out over water
- Relatively warmer water heats air which then
rises (low) - Upper level return sea breeze
- Cool air over land sinks
34Radiation, Heat Migrating Tropical Low (ITC)
- Notice that the more intense radiation zones move
from north of the equator to south of the equator
and back caused by the axis tilt
35The Tropical Low (ITCZ) Driving Engine of the
Wind System
- There is a seasonal lag in the shifting of the
wind belts.
36Apparent shifting of direct radiation from the
sun and the resulting wind belts
37Hydrologic Cycle Temperature/ Precipitation
Relationship
Water vapor is continually changing from a gas to
a liquid and from a liquid to a gas. Where it is
cold enough, the change also involves ice.
Click this diagram to see a video
38Precipitation
- Normal precipitation
- Condensation
- Conversion of water from vapor to liquid state
- ALL air holds water
- Dependent on temperature
- Saturation vapor pressure
- Maximum water vapor air can hold at a particular
temperature
39Relative Humidity
- Water content of air
- Percent of water air could hold at a given
temperature - Fluctuates hourly as temperature changes
- Saturation point condensation
- Condensation clouds
Temperature Relative Humidity
86 degrees F 50 if holds half water vapor possible
71 degrees F 75
60 degrees F 100
40Precipitation 3 Types
- (1) Convectional precipitation
- Warm, humid rises, expanding and cooling
- Saturation point is reached
- Clouds form
- Adiabatic cooling
- Decrease in temperature that results from
expansion of rising air - Convectional storms
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42(2) Orographic Precipitation
- Wind forces air up and over mountains
- Rain on windward side
- Desert on leeward side Rain shadow
- Examples
- Cascades Sierras
- Rockies
- Exception Appalachians
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44(3) Frontal Precipitation
- Air forced up a boundary between cold and warm
air masses - Air mass
- Region of air with similar characteristics
- Cold front
- Cold air mass moves towards warm air mass
- Typical weather
- Warm front
- Warm air mass moves towards cooler air mass
- Typical weather
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47Frontal (Cyclonic) Precipitation curving
rotation come from the Coriolis effect.
Normally, a mass of warm air rises above a mass
of cooler air when the two masses meet. As the
warmer mass cools, there is condensation and
possibly precipitation.
48Cold front closes the gap
49Circulation Patterns
- Air mass 14.7 lbs per square inch
- Atmospheric pressure
- Varies with altitude
- Higher altitude less atmospheric pressure
- Barometer
- Maps use isobars
50Jet Streams
- Fluctuations in the jet streams affect the
behavior of various air masses. - Their immediate effect is on weather.
51Air Masses Affecting N. America
- St. Louis winter cyclonic (frontal)
precipitation - St. Louis summer convectional precipitation
52Pressure and Winds
- Air density
- Warm air less dense
- Pressure gradient
- Difference in pressure between two places
- Coriolis Effect
- Indirect, curving path of wind caused by rotation
of the Earth - Strongest in polar regions
53Click the picture to see the Flash animation
54Global Circulation
- 4 zones
- Intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ)
- Convectional precipitation
- Trade winds
- Subtropical high-pressure zones
- Areas of dry, bright sunshine, little
precipitation - Midlatitude low-pressure zones
- Polar front
- Westerlies
- Polar high-pressure zones
- Dense air, high pressure
- Little precipitation
- Seasonal variations
55Wind Belts
- In April, the belts start shifting to the north.
- In October, the belts start shifting to the south.
56Monsoon a seasonal shifting of wind direction.
- Wind horizontal movement of air from a high to a
low pressure area - Where? -- South, Southeast, East Asia
- Southeastern U.S. (not as pronounced in the U.S.)
57Our Water World
- Surface 70 water
- Water moves horizontally, vertically, and
obliquely - Some movement results in heat transfers
- Polar waters to equatorial areas visa versa
- Upwelling of water from depths of 200 ft. plus
- Slow descent of surface waters
- Some movement doesnt transfer heat
- Storm activity, tidal movements, seismic waves
- Ocean currents are those movements that transfer
heat
58Ocean Circulation Patterns
- Wind creates waves and currents
- Gyres
- Wind-driven circular flows
- El Niño
- Occasional shifts in ocean circulation
59North Atlantic Drift Moderates European
Temperatures
60Characteristics of Ocean Currents in the
three-dimensional oceans
- Cold a relative term
- Warm a relative term
- High salinity a relative term
- Weakly saline a relative term
- Occurring at great depth
- Occurring at intermediate depths
- Occurring at the surface
61Prevailing Winds Influence Ocean Currents
- Between tropics greatest volume of water flows to
the west - Influenced by the northeasterly trade wind belt
and the southeasterly trade wind belt solar
power? - Small countercurrent between them
- When the westerly currents reach continental
shores are deflected poleward (Coriolis force) - In the midlatitudes, the prevailing westerlies
propel the ocean currents to the east - Result circulating systems (gyres)
- Clockwise circulation in northern hemisphere
counterclockwise circulation in southern one.
62El Nino Click the CD to see the video
- La Nina produces the opposite effects
63The Oceans Role in the Ecosystem
- Redistributes heat preventing greater extremes at
the tropics and the poles - Poles less cold
- Tropics less hot
- Source of atmospheric humidity (evaporation)
- Home of abundant plant and animal life valuable
food sources - Phytoplankton produce much oxygen
64Precipitable Water Vapor
65Storms
- Cyclones
- Large low-pressure areas
- Winds
- Counterclockwise in Northern Hemisphere
- Clockwise in Southern Hemisphere
- Hurricanes and typhoons
- Tropical cyclones
- Need warm, moist air
- Most powerful over oceans
- Storm surge
- Elevated sea level in center of storm
- Midlatitude cyclones
66Severe Storms Click the picture of a warm front
to see the video
67Climate
- Summary of weather conditions over several
decades or more - Influences
- Changes over time
- Humans and climate
- 2 primary measures
- Temperature
- Precipitation
68Air Temperature
Frequently encountered terms Tierra
Caliente Tierra Templada Tierra Fria
- Variation
- Latitude
- Seasonal solar energy input
- Elevation
- Topography
69Precipitation
- Variable between places and through time
- Worldwide variation 0-120 inches
- Global circulation patterns
- Amount of precipitation
- Reliability
- Regularity
- Soil saturation
- Human adjustments
70Classifying Climate
- Allows analysis and planning
- Communication
- Köppen System
- Wladimir Köppen, 1918
- Distribution of plants
- 5 basic climate types with subdivisions
- Most widely used system
71Climate Regions
- Horizontal bands based on latitude
- Climate regions similar to
- Bioregions/Vegetation Retions
- Temperature and precipitation maps
- Other influences (see next slide)
72CLIMATE VARIABLES Lamppost!
- Latitude
- Altitude
- Maritime Influence
- Pressure Systems
- Prevailing Winds
- Ocean Currents
- Storms
- Topography
73Climate System Model
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75Humid Low-Latitude Tropical Climates (A)
- Warm all year
- Humid tropical (Af, Am)
- /- 10 degrees N/S of equator
- Warm humid Little seasonal temp. variation
- High temps Rain
- Amazon River Basin, Equatorial Africa, Islands of
South East Asia - Seasonally humid tropical climates (Aw)
- Concentrated rainfall
- Seasonal shifts of ITCZ
- Central South America
76Dry Climates (B)
- Dry climates, BW BS
- 35 of Earths land area
- Border low latitude humid climates on North and
South - North Africa, Central Asia
- Desert climates (BWh, BWk)
- Warm and dry
- Subtropics
- New Mexico (BWh), China (BWk)
- Semi-arid climates (BSh, BSk)
- Transitional areas between deserts and humid
areas - Grasslands, steppes
- Seasonal temperature contrasts
77Warm Mid-latitude Climates (C)
- Seasonal temp variation (4 seasons)
- Reversed seasons in the southern hemisphere
- Less precipitation
- Humid subtropical (Cfa, Cw)
- Latitude 25-40 degrees on east side of
continents - Eastern China, SE US, Brazil, Argentina
- Marine west coast (Cfb, Cfc)
- Continental west coasts, 35-65 degrees
- Mild climates
- California to coastal Alaska, Southern Chile
- Mediterranean climates (Cs)
- Dry summers with seasonal precipitation
78Cold Mid-latitude Climates (D) Only found in
the northern hemisphere
- Humid continental climates (Dfa, Dwa, Dfb, Dwb)
- Strong contrasts
- Remote from oceans little moisture
- Interior eastern side of Northern Hemisphere
Continents (35-60 degrees) - Subarctic climates (Dfc, Dwc, Dfd, Dwd)
- Northern edge of humid continental climates
- No agriculture
- Northern Hemisphere only
- Vegetation Boreal forests
79None in southern hemisphere
- St. Louis on border between Dfa Cfa to the south
80Polar Climates (E)
- High latitude climates
- Low temps
- Extreme seasonal variability
- Tundra climate (ET)
- Permafrost
- Tundra
- Ice-cap climates (EF)
- Near poles high altitudes at low latitudes
81USA Climatically Blessed
- Within the 50 states and Puerto Rico, the USA has
some of every type of climate in most
classification systems (variations of Kopen - The US can produce at least some of every type of
food and industrial crop in the world - No other country has this distinction
- The USA has relatively large areas of climate
that have the potential to be highly productive
agriculturally
82Climate Change 3 hypotheses or a combination of
them
- Astronomical
- Geometry of Earths orbit
- Sunspots
- Geologic
- Continental drift
- Volcanic eruptions
- Human (human actions may accelerate or exacerbate
changes in the other two) - Atmosphere pollution global warming
- Vegetation massive destruction of biomes
83Climate change is very complex.
- Inconstant Climates historical evidence of
significant changes dynamic, not static - Cyclical Change cycle of wet and dry years in
the Midwest around St. Louis - Have we identified all the various cycles?
- More frequent El Niño years? Linked to human
actions? - Human Actions
- Global Warming
- Great reduction of the rainforests
- Major humidity pumps for the atmosphere
- Major oxygen producers (often overlooked feature)
84More about climate cycles
- El Niño La Niña period between them may be
shortening - The Dust Bowl was the result of a cycle of wet
and dry years in the Great Plains that humans did
not understand
85Human Impact on the Arctic Click the map to see
the video
- Global warming
- Ozone depletion
- Resource extraction
- Settlement
86Solar powered world
87Solar-Powered World
- So many things on earth depend on the sun that it
may not be an understatement to say that we live
on a solar-powered world. - Without the sun the earth would be frozen and
lifeless - Sun warms the earth to a range of temperatures
where a variety of chemical compounds exist as
solids, liquids, or gases in some places H2O
can exist in all three.
88More solar-powered world
- H2O, particularly in liquid state is vital to
practically every form of life on earth - Sunlight provides the energy for photosynthesis
which produces plant food - Basis of food chain
- Uses CO2 and produces O2
- Solar energy results in variable heating and
cooling of the earth surface, thereby causing
wind and driving the wind belts. - Ocean currents are partly solar-powered because
the wind belts influence them.
89More solar-powered world
- Tilt of the earths axis helps distribute the
insolation over a larger parts of the earths
surface and causes the seasons. - Burning fossil fuels is merely releasing energy
that plants received from the sun and locked into
their cells long, long ago. - Burning wood (hasnt had time to become a fossil
fuel) is also merely releasing energy that plants
received from the sun and locked into their cells
90Solar Powered World fossil fuels
91Interactions With Climate
- Soil
- Decomposer activity
- Moisture content
- Vegetation food chain base
- Succession of plants climax vegetation
- Available water
- Streams ground water
Everything is interconnected in the biosphere.
92Natural Vegetation
- Develops in response to soil and climate
- Influences soil by providing the organic matter
or humus i.e. rainforest feed itself - Influences climate
- Evapotranspiration provides much of the humidity
the cutting down of tropical rainforests may
result in decreased precipitation and prevent the
reestablishment of rainforests - Reaches and maintains a climax vegetation
condition as long as climate remains constant and
human actions dont interfere.
93Tropical Rainforest Exists on Extremely Poor Soil
Very poor, lateritic soil
94How Physical are the Physical Factors in the
Biosphere?
- The human impact on climate and other physical
systems is a serious problem!
The end of Chapter 2