Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Class #12: Thursday, July 22 Climate types Chapter 17 1Class #12, Thursday, July 22.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Class #12: Thursday, July 22 Climate types Chapter 17 1Class #12, Thursday, July 22."— Presentation transcript:

1 Class #12: Thursday, July 22 Climate types Chapter 17 1Class #12, Thursday, July 22

2 Global Climate Chapter 17 2Class #12, Thursday, July 22

3 A World with Many Climates  Micro, meso, macro  Global Climate  Climate controls Latitude Land and water Ocean currents Prevailing winds Pressure cells Mountain barriers Altitude 3Class #12, Thursday, July 22

4 A World with Many Climates Global temperatures – East-west isotherms – Bends or kinks due to ocean currents and continents Global precipitation – Precipitation occurs consistently where low pressure belts exist in the Global Circulation Model – Mountains, rain shadow 4Class #12, Thursday, July 22

5 Fig. 17-CO, p. 468 5Class #12, Thursday, July 22

6 6

7 7

8 8

9 9

10 Fig. 1, p. 475 10Class #12, Thursday, July 22

11 11Class #12, Thursday, July 22

12 A World with Many Climates Topic: Precipitation Extremes – Rainiest locations on windward side of mountains – Driest locations in frigid polar regions 12Class #12, Thursday, July 22

13 Climate Classification  The Ancient Greeks Tropical, temperate, and polar zone  The Köppen System Waldimir Köppen Related vegetation and climate in order to predict climate types in areas without climate data  The Thornthwaite System P/E ratio, P/E Index Potential Evapotranspiration 13Class #12, Thursday, July 22

14 14Class #12, Thursday, July 22

15 Stepped Art Fig. 17-6, p. 477 15Class #12, Thursday, July 22

16 The Global Pattern of Climate Tropical Moist Climates (Group A) – General characteristics: year-round warm temperatures abundant rainfall – Extent: northward and southward from the equator to about 15º to 25º – Major Types: tropical wet (Af), tropical monsoon (Am), tropical wet and dry (Aw) 16Class #12, Thursday, July 22

17 17Class #12, Thursday, July 22

18 18Class #12, Thursday, July 22

19 Table 17-1a, p. 480 19Class #12, Thursday, July 22

20 Table 17-1b, p. 480 20Class #12, Thursday, July 22

21 21Class #12, Thursday, July 22

22 22Class #12, Thursday, July 22

23 23Class #12, Thursday, July 22

24 24Class #12, Thursday, July 22

25 25Class #12, Thursday, July 22

26 26Class #12, Thursday, July 22

27 The Global Pattern of Climate Dry Climates (Group B) – General Characteristics: deficient precipitation most of the year; potential evaporation and transpiration exceed precipitation – Extent: the subtropical deserts extend roughly 20º and 30º latitude in large continental regions of the middle latitudes, often surrounded by mountains – Major Types: arid (BW), semi-arid (BS) 27Class #12, Thursday, July 22

28 28Class #12, Thursday, July 22

29 29Class #12, Thursday, July 22

30 30Class #12, Thursday, July 22

31 31Class #12, Thursday, July 22

32 32Class #12, Thursday, July 22

33 The Global Pattern of Climate Observation: Deserts with Clouds and Drizzle – A desert that owes it existence, in part, to its proximity to cold ocean water and, in part, to the position and air motions of the subtropical high pressure cell. 33Class #12, Thursday, July 22

34 Fig. 2, p. 487 34Class #12, Thursday, July 22

35 The Global Pattern of Climate Moist Subtropical Mid-latitude Climates (Group C) – General Characteristics: humid with mil winters – Extent: on the eastern and western regions of most continents, from about 25º to 40º latitude – Major types: humid subtropical (Cfa), marine (Cfb), Mediterranean (Cs) 35Class #12, Thursday, July 22

36 36Class #12, Thursday, July 22

37 37Class #12, Thursday, July 22

38 38Class #12, Thursday, July 22

39 39Class #12, Thursday, July 22

40 The Global Pattern of Climate  Moist Continental Climates (Group D) General characteristics: warm-to-cool summers and cold winters; winters are severe with snowstorms, blustery winds, bitter cold; climate controlled by large continents Extent: north of moist subtropical mid-latitude climates Major types: humid continental with hot summers (Dfa), humid continental with cool summers (Dfb), subpolar (Dfc) 40Class #12, Thursday, July 22

41 41Class #12, Thursday, July 22

42 Table 1, p. 492 42Class #12, Thursday, July 22

43 Fig. 3, p. 492 43Class #12, Thursday, July 22

44 Fig. 4, p. 493 44Class #12, Thursday, July 22

45 45Class #12, Thursday, July 22

46 46Class #12, Thursday, July 22

47 47Class #12, Thursday, July 22

48 The Global Pattern of Climate Topics: Dry Spells and Drought – Drought :a period of abnormally dry weather – Dry spell: normal seasonal dry period 48Class #12, Thursday, July 22

49 The Global Pattern of Climate Polar Climates (Group E) – General Characteristics: year-round low temperatures – Extent: northern coastal areas of North America and Eurasia; Greenland and Antarctica – Major types: polar tundra (ET), polar ice caps (EP) 49Class #12, Thursday, July 22

50 50Class #12, Thursday, July 22

51 51Class #12, Thursday, July 22

52 52Class #12, Thursday, July 22

53 The Global Pattern of Climate Highland Climates (Group H) – Decrease in temperature with elevation – Vertical zonation 53Class #12, Thursday, July 22

54 54Class #12, Thursday, July 22

55 Table 17-2, p. 499 55Class #12, Thursday, July 22

56 Table 17-3, p. 499 56Class #12, Thursday, July 22


Download ppt "Class #12: Thursday, July 22 Climate types Chapter 17 1Class #12, Thursday, July 22."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google