Title: Climate Varies around the Globe: How and Why
1 Climate Varies around the Globe
How and Why?
Yongqin David Chen (???) Department of
Geography and Resource Management The Chinese
University of Hong Kong Shatin, NT, Hong Kong
2Presentation Outline
- Climate controls latitude dominates, others also
work - Classification of irregularly distributed
climates - Similar latitudes, but very different climates
Somalia vs Malaysia, Shandong vs Xinjiang
3Climate controls
- (1) Latitude fluctuations in the amount of
solar radiation received at earths surface,
represents the single greatest cause of
temperature differences. - Land and water marine and continental climates
- Ocean currents poleward-moving warm currents
(Gulf Stream and Kuroshio Current in N Hemisphere
and Brazilian and East Australian Currents in S
Hemisphere, more pronounced impacts in winter)
and equatorward-moving cold currents (Canaries
and California Currents in N Hemisphere and
Peruvian and Benguela Currents in S Hemisphere,
chilling effects stabilize air masses) - Pressure centers and prevailing winds - air mass
movement and gain or loss of heat and moisture,
seasonal shifting. More maritime on the west
coast of N America and more continental on the
east coast - Mountain barriers and highlands windward and
leeward sides and rain shadow, Andes and
Himalayan in S America and Asia, no mountain
barrier in western Europe leading to moderate
temperatures and sufficient precipitation in the
entire region
4- Latitudinal heat balance.
- Average over the entire year, we see that
equatorward from 36o , the amount of incoming
solar radiation exceeds the loss from outgoing
terrestrial radiation. The reverse is true for
the middle and high (polar) latitudes, where
losses from outgoing terrestrial radiation exceed
gains from incoming solar radiation.
- Climate is a 3-D phenomenon
- latitudinal, longitudinal, and altitudinal
- An index of continentality
- gauges the influence of oceans on air temperature
over continents. In this scheme, North America is
divided into zones of increasing maritime
influence continental, subcontinental, maritime,
and ultramaritime. The greater the maritime
influence, the less is the contrast between
average summer and average winter temperatures. - Adapted from D.R. Currey, Continentality of
Extratropical Climates. Annals of Association of
American Geographers 64, No.2 91974)274
5- Major Ocean Currents
- 1. Gulf Stream
- 2. North Atlantic Drift
- 3. Labrador Current
- 4. West Greenland Drift
- 5. East Greenland Drift
- 6. Canary Current
- 7. North Equatorial Current
- 8. North Equatorial Countercurrent
- 9. South Equatorial Current
- 10. South Equatorial
- Countercurrent
- 11. Equatorial Countercurrent
- 12. Kuroshio Current
- 13. North Pacific Drift
- 14. Alaska Current
- 15. Oyashio Current
- 16. California Current
- 17. Peru or Humbolt Current
6- Coastal upwellings
- are important because they provide abundant
nutrients and therefore encourage rich fishing
grounds.
7Köppen system - Five principal climate groups
A) Humid tropical - Winterless climates all
months have a mean temperature
above 18oC. B) Dry - Climates where potential
evaporation exceeds precipitation there is a
constant water deficiency. C) Humid
middle-latitude, mild winters - the average
temperature of the coldest month is below 18oC
but above -3oC. D) Humid middle-latitude,
severe winter - the average temperature of the
coldest month is below -3oC and the warmest
monthly mean exceeds 10oC. E) Polar -
Summerless climates the average temperature of
the warmest month is below 10oC.
8- The zone is a strange climatological phenomenon
a desert (the Somali-Chalbi) on the eastern
cost in tropical latitudes. The extreme aridity
is caused, in the main, by the fact that the
prevailing winds, during most months of the year,
have a northeasterly or southwesterly direction,
thus making moist air masses over the land an
exception rather than the rule (Fig.1). - The Horn of Africa, by J.F. Griffiths
- Climates of Africa, Vol. 10,
- World Survey of Climatology, p. 134
9- Unusual aridity of the Horn of Africa caused
Flohn (1964) to ask - why are the summer rains missing?
-
- directional divergence produced by overheating at
the Ethiopian highlands, - speed divergence produced by the northerly
increase of the pressure gradient, - frictional divergence in coast-parallel winds,
- deflection of wind-driven ocean surface current
and cold upwelling along the coast.
Flohn, H., 1964. On the causes of the aridity of
northeastern Africa. Würzburger Geograph. Arb.,
12 17 pp. (English translation by East African
Meteorological Dept., Nairobi, 1966.)
10- why are the summer rains missing? (1)
directional divergence produced by overheating at
the Ethiopian highlands (2) speed divergence
produced by the northerly increase of the
pressure gradient (3) frictional divergence in
coast-parallel winds (4) deflection of
wind-driven ocean surface current and cold
upwelling along the coast.
- Amazing fluctuations of annual rainfall amounts
at Djibouti for 64 years - - Less than 30 mm for five years
- - 250 mm or more for four years
11- Seasons defined by rainfall patterns
- Jilal December to March, the northeast monsoon
is in dominance and conditions are dry and
relatively hot. - Gu April and May, the transition period,
relatively wet and hot. - Hagar June to September, the southwest monsoon
dominates, bringing relatively cool conditions
with showers along the coast but dry inland. - Der October and November, the transition
period, similar to the Gu but there is the
important rainy season in the north.
12- Climate of Malaysia
- Tropical annual southwest (April to October) and
northeast (October to February) monsoons
- What is the Malaysia's climate like?
- Malaysia has two main seasons, theÂ
Northeast Monsoon (November to March) and theÂ
Southwest Monsoon (May to September),
separated by two relatively shorterÂ
intermonsoon periods. The mean monthlyÂ
rainfall amount shows drier weather conditions
from May to July and wetter weather conditions
from November to January. February is also aÂ
relatively dry month. The date of the beginning
and end of the monsoon varies from year to
year.They are determined by the beginning of rain
spell and predominant wind direction.
13The End