Geography 140
Introduction to Physical Geography

Lecture: Climates

--------------------
  I. Climate could be defined as the trends in typical weather:  
     A. Temperature of an area: 
        1. Its mean or average:
           a. Annually
           b. Monthly
           c. Average monthly daytime highs and nighttime lows
        2. Its typical degree of variation:
           a. Range or standard deviation in annual averages
           b. Range or standard deviation in monthly averages
           c. Range or standard deviation in monthly highs and lows
        3. When the highest and lowest monthly averages are experienced
     B. Precipitation: 
        1. Types commonly experienced: rain, snow, sleet, hail
        2. Averages 
           a. Annual receipt
           b. Receipt by month
        3. Typical variation
           a. Extreme ranges annually and monthly
           b. Standard deviations annually and monthly
        4. When the highest and lowest monthly averages are experienced
        5. Duration of drought
     C. The balance between precipitation and evapotranspiration: Dry climates 
        can evaporate or transpire more water than they actually receive; wet 
        climates may run a surplus of precipitation over evapotranspiration; 
        surpluses and deficits may exist at different times of the year.

 II. A number of climate classification systems are encountered in physical 
     geography.  They might be based on annual and monthly averages of 
     temperature and precipitation or perhaps on the balance between 
     precipitation and potential evapotranspiration (itself based on 
     temperature).
     A. C. Warren Thornthwaite developed a water budget approach, based on 
        potential evapotranspiration compared to water receipt.  The result 
        was 32 climate types based on five major water budget provinces:  
        rainforest, forest, grassland, steppe, and desert.  It's rather 
        cumbersome for my purposes here, but I wanted to mention it. You can 
        see the basic idea in this graph, which shows the monthly march of 

        potential evapotranspiration (POTET) as a green line and monthly 
        receipt of precipitation as a red line.  A deficit is shaded.

        [ Thornthwaite's water balance ]

     
     B. Wladimir Köppen devised a system based on monthly temperature averages and 
        precipitation receipt, which he and his student, Rudolf Geiger put 
        together into a wonderful map of the world's climates, called the 
        Köppen-Geiger map, which you can view by clicking here.

        1. His system has six main categories:
           a. A: Tropical humid climates 
           b. B: Dry climates (arid and semiarid), in which POTET exceeds 
              precipitation
           c. C: Temperate or subtropical mid-latitude climates 
           d. D: Mid-latitude climates with cold, snowy winters, in which the 
              warmest month must average at least 10° C, but the coldest 
              month must average less than -3° C.
           e. E: Cold climates, in which no month averages above 10° C
           f. H: Highland climates are the highly varied microclimates we see 
              on a mountain, including even polar-like climates at the top of 
              those mountains taller than timberline.
        2. Then, he subdivides these six major categories into a series of 
           minor subcategories, which pretty neatly characterize the different 
           climate experiences around the world, so I'll orgration (POTET) as a red line and monthly receipt 
        of precipitation as bars.  The bars are, helpfully, shaded green whenanize this lecture 
           loosely around Köppen.

III. Tropical climates (the A climates).  All months have average temperatures 
     (day and night averaged together) above 18° C and annual 
     precipitation totals of at least 1,800 mm
     A. Tropical Rainforest (sometimes called Equatorial Wet)
        1. Classified Af. The f stands for German "feucht" ("foikht") or 
           moist.  
        2. This climate is warm all year round.  There is less than 3° C 
           of temperature difference between the hottest and the coldest 
           monthly average!  The day temperatures are around 32° C (upper 
           80s F) and the nighttime temperatures are around 22°C (very 
           pleasant room temperature).  So it never gets terribly hot or cold.
        3. There is no dry season: The driest month gets at least 6 cm of 
           rain.
        4. This essentially seasonless climate is influenced by the ITCZ all 
           year round.
        5. If you look at the map above, you'll see that the location of the 
           Af climate is right along the equator
           a. The Amazon Basin of Brazil in South America
           b. The Congo Basin in central Africa
           c. The Indonesian Archipelago and the Malaysian Peninsula
     B. Tropical Monsoon 
        1. Classified Am
        2. This two season climate has a short but noticeable winter dry 
           season, but it rains so bloody hard during the summer that the area 
           is able to support tropical rainforest vegetation anyhow.
        3. This climate is generally affected by the ITCZ but is far enough 
           away from the equator to be affected by the fringes of the 
           Subtropical High during the winter when the world pressure and wind 
           system moves out of a hemisphere, as seen in this spiffy animation:

           [ animation of global circulation shifting with the 
declination of the sun, Michael Pidwirny, Okanagan University College, 2000 ]

        4. When the monsoonal circulation of summer hits, though, it more than 
           makes up for its short summer POTET deficit:  Some of the highest 
           precipitation totals in the world fall on these climates.
        5. The places having this climate are not far from the equator and the 
           tropical rainforest climates (see map:
           a. Sierra Leone and Liberia in western Africa north of the equator
           b. The northwest coast of Brazil in South America
           c. Southwesternmost India and Sri Lanka
     C. Tropical Wet and Dry (sometimes called Tropical Wet-Dry or Tropical 
        Savanna).
        1. It is classifed Aw (for winter dry season)
        2. This is a two season climate. 
        3. During the summer, the ITCZ moves over it as the ITCZ moves higher 
           into a hemisphere, and this results in a rainy, warm summer.  In 
           another variation, sometimes a mountainous east coastal location in 
           the tropics will be covered by the onshore Trade Winds during the 
           summer, similarly producing a rainy summer through orographic 
           uplift.
        4. It is covered, instead, by the Subtropical High during the winter, 
           which gives it "Sahara Desert" summers:  very dry, very hot (kind 
           of like the California summer, actually).  
        5. The dry season lasts so long and the summer rain does not 
           compensate for the winter drought, so this climate cannot support 
           tropical rainforest vegetation.  Instead, it is covered with 
           tropical deciduous woodland or savanna (a mix of tall grass and 
           clumps of mid-size trees)
        6. So, you'd expect to find it poleward of the tropical rainforest and 
           tropical monsoon climates, surrounding them, and you'd be right, 
           for example (see map):
           a. Most of central Africa outside the Congo Basin, extending down 
              east Africa (which is too high to have a tropical rainforest 
              climate).
           b. Most of Brazil south of the Amazon rainforest and north of it.
           c. Most of Indochina:  Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand
           d. Northernmost Australia

 IV. Dry climates.  These experience moisture stress most of the year.
     A. BW climates: true deserts (from German "Wüste" or wasteland).  
        These are extremely dry and can support only desert scrub and, in some 
        cases, almost no vegetation at all.
        1. BWh -- Tropical desert (from German "heiss" for hot).  Like the A 
           climates, a BWh climate has an average annual temperature of at 
           least 18° C.
           a. This desert is the one strongly affected by the Subtropical High 
              all year round. Imagine the California summer ... all year 
              round.
           b. Tropical deserts not only are found around 30° N or S, they 
              also open out onto the west coasts of continents, where that 
              cold current is found.  The cold current wrings out any moisture 
              that might have formed precipitation onshore.
           c. Sometimes the part of the desert opening out on the west coast 
              will experience fog in summer, kind of the way Long Beach does.  
              If so, that narrow strip of coastal desert is further called 
              BWhn (from German "nebel" or fog).
           d. With these characteristics, it is easy to predict where you'll 
              find these climates.  Look at the map above:
                i. The Sahara Desert system, which extends around 10-20° N 
                   from the Sahara proper in North Africa, through the deserts 
                   of the Middle East, clear into the Thar Desert of Pakistan 
                   and northwest India.  The mother of all desert systems.     
               ii. The Namib Desert of southwestern Africa, Namibia.
              iii. The Great Sandy Desert of Australia, the Outback.
               iv. The Atacama Desert of northern Chile and Peru:  The driest 
                   desert on Earth, by the way (it's gone as long as thirteen 
                   YEARS without even trace precipitation!)
                v. The Sonoran or Colorado Desert of northwestern Mexico 
                   (including Baja) and the American extreme Southwest 
                   (including Palm Springs):  Californians call this the "Low 
                   Desert" because of its low elevation.
        2. BWk -- Temperate Desert or Mid-latitude Desert or Temperate Arid 
           (from German "kalt" for cold).  
           a. This climate is also extremely dry, unable to support more than 
              desert scrub vegetation.
           b. Unlike the tropical desert, though, it can get awfully cold in 
              the winter.  To be classified BWk, it has to average below 
              18° C, and some months are so cold as to see snow.
           c. In some ways, this is even tougher on plants:  They have to 
              adapt to extreme heat and dryness AND freezing cold, too.
           d. These deserts form in rainshadows in the Prevailing Westerlies 
              belt, so you expect to find them on the leeward side of 
              mountain ranges, usually to their east or, sometimes, north (in 
              the Northern Hemisphere), as seen in the map.
                i. The Gobi Desert of Mongolia and inner China, in the 
                   rainshadow of the Tibetan Plateau.
               ii. The Central Asian deserts in the rainshadow of the Zagros 
                   Mountains of Iran.
              iii. The Patagonian Desert of Argentina, in the rainshadow of 
                   the Andes.
               iv. The Basin and Range deserts of eastern California, Nevada, 
                   and Utah, in the rainshadow of the Sierra Nevada.
                v. The Mojave, in the rainshadow of California's Transverse 
                   and Tehachapi ranges (what we call the "High Desert" 
                   because it is at higher elevations).  
        3. BSh -- Tropical Semi-Arid or Tropical Steppe.
           a. Like the Tropical Desert and the A climates, this one also has 
              an annual average temperature of at least 18° C.
           b. It is a bit more humid than the true desert, so it supports a 
              somewhat denser scrub vegetation or some grass.
           c. When it gets rain, it's in the summer, when the fringe of the 
              ITCZ might move far enough poleward to affect this area.  
              Winters are bone dry and hot, like the Sahara.  The rainfall is 
              very unpredictable here.  It's something of an axiom in 
              climatology that the drier a climate is the more unpredictable 
              its precipitation becomes.  In good years here, the vegetation 
              gets almost lush: a lot of grass; in bad years, it is almost 
              bereft of anything but the occasional shrub and blade of grass.
           d. This climate is a transition, then, from Tropical Wet and Dry 
              climate to Tropical Desert, and that's a clue to where to find 
              it.  Examining the map above, you'll see BSh climates in:
                i. Africa just south of the Sahara, in a great band known as 
                   the Sahel (which has often been in the news with repeated 
                   droughts and famine). 
               ii. Africa to the southwest, east of the Namib Desert:  The 
                   Kalahari Steppe.
              iii. In Australia, fringing the desert of the interior.
               iv. Most of northern Mexico.
        4. BSk -- Temperate Semi-Arid or Mid-Latitude Semi-Arid or Temperate 
           Steppe.
           a. Dry, but not as bone dry as temperate desert
           b. Not as hot as tropical steppe, with average annual temperatures 
              under 18° C -- and, like temperate desert, it can get pretty 
              wickedly cold in the winter.
           c. Like the tropical steppe climate, it can support a steppe 
              vegetation, a mix of short to medium grasses and shrubs in good 
              years and just the shrubs and a few short grasses in bad years.
           d. Like the tropical steppe climate, it is a transition climate.  
              In this case, it forms a transition between temperate desert and 
              a variety of surrounding more humid climates (e.g., 
              Mediterranean, humid subtropical, humid continental).
           e. So, we find it on the perimeter of temperate desert:
                i. Surrounding the Gobi Desert
               ii. To the north of the Central Asian deserts, extending west 
                   to the Ukraine ("steppe" is a Ukrainian word for the 
                   associated vegetation, actually).
              iii. Much of the Iranian highlands
               iv. The Pampas area in Argentina, surrounding the Patagonian 
                   Desert.
                v. The American Great Plains east of the Rockies
               vi. The northern Basin and Range:  northern Nevada, southern 
                   Idaho.

  V. Mild winter mid-latitude climates.  As a group, these very different 
     climates share two common temperature characteristics:  Their coldest 
     month must average below 18° C but above -3° C; their hottest 
     month must average warmer than 10° C.  Other than that, they really 
     differ from one another.
     A. Cf climates are moist ("feucht) and mild:  They have no dry season.  
        No month gets less than 3 cm of precipitation.  There are two very 
        different versions of this basic type:
        1. Cfa, "a" meaning hot summer, with the warmest month averaging above 
           22° C.  These are called Humid Subtropical climates.
           a. This climate receives precipitation in the winter from mid-
              latitude wave cyclones as the Subpolar Low and the Westerlies 
              move closer to the equator in winter.  This precipitation is 
              mostly in the form of rain, but sometimes in the form of snow.
           b. During the summer, this climate receives precipitation as a 
              result of the movement poleward of the Subtropical High and its 
              breakup into concentrated, circular cells in the oceans.  These 
              peaks of high pressure (e.g., the Bermudas High) generate 
              spiraling outflows of air.  Off the east coasts of continents, 
              these winds flow over the warm currents in those locations 
              (e.g., the Gulf Stream), picking up beaucoup water vapor 
              through evaporation.  This moisture-loaded air then hits the 
              east coasts of continents and convectional and orographic 
              processes create lots of summer thunderstorms:  It rains a LOT 
              in this climate during the summer and, when it isn't raining, 
              it's really pretty sticky.
           c. The responsible processes are a clue to the locations of this 
              climate.  If you look at the map above, you can find Cfa 
              climates in subtropical latitudes, oh, about 30-40° N or S, 
              but on the EAST coasts of the landmasses.  For example:
                i. The American Southeast (think of New Orleans, Atlanta, 
                   Houston, and Washington DC in the summer -- 'nuff said)
               ii. Southeast China and southern Japan (Shanghai, Tokyo)
              iii. Southern Brazil, Uruguay, and northeast Argentina 
                   (Montevideo and Buenos Aires)
               iv. Southeast Australia (Sydney, Brisbane)
        2. Cfb -- "b" meaning mild summer:  No summer month averages above 
           22° C.  This is called the West Coast Marine climate (guess 
           where it's found).  Like the Humid Subtropical climate, this one is 
           also moist all year round, with no month averaging below 3 cm.
           a. This climate is affected by the Subpolar Low and the Westerlies 
              all year round:  It never escapes the humidity and raininess 
              associated with these, though it is a bit weaker in the summer, 
              since the Subpolar Low shifts poleward, reconnects over land, 
              and weakens.  The Westerlies flow, however, is always bringing 
              moisture ashore from the tepid remains of the warm drifts in 
              these latitudes.
                i. The Japan or Kuroshio Current becomes the North Pacific 
                   Drift, which, well, drifts eastward until it hits the 
                   Pacific Northwest and then turns south toward California 
                   (becoming relatively colder as it moves south, eventually 
                   becoming our California Cold Current).  Up around Sitka and 
                   Seattle, though, it is still relatively tepid and so the 
                   Westerlies flow brings water vapor evaporated from that 
                   Drift onshore.  So, now you understand Seattle's and 
                   Vancouver's famously soggy summers.
               ii. The same thing goes on in Northwest Europe:  The Gulf 
                   Stream becomes the North Atlantic Drift and the Subpolar 
                   Low and Westerlies bring that moisture ashore, giving 
                   London its famous pea-soup charm (they get REALLY excited 
                   when there's an actual sunny day there!). 
           b. Well, discussing the mechanisms responsible for this climate, 
              I've inadvertantly spilled the beans about two of its major 
              locations:  The Pacific Northwest  (including British Columbia 
              and southeasternmost Alaska) and Northwest Europe (England, 
              Ireland ["the Emerald Isle," from all that water], northern 
              France, the Netherlands, northern Germany). There are a few 
              others: 
                i. Southern Chile at the southwest end of South America
               ii. Tasmania and the southeasternmost corner of Australia and 
                   New Zealand.
              iii. The southeasternmost tip of southern Africa.
           c. There are also a few places that are basically West Coast Marine 
              in character but have short, cool summers: Cfc.  Like regular 
              old Cfb, these never average above 22° C, but they have 
              fewer than four months that manage to squeak averages above 
              10° C.  These are found on the poleward fringes of the West 
              Coast Marine regime (southern Alaska, southern Scandinavia).
     B. Cs climates, known as Mediterranean climates.  Like any C climate, 
        these are warm climates, with no winter month averaging below -3° 
        C or above 18° C.  Like all C climates, Mediterranean climates 
        have their warmest months averaging above 10° C.
        1. That said, the BIG difference is these are summer-drought climates:  
           That's what the "s" stands for.  These are essentially two season 
           subtropical climates, with the dry season in the summer, which is 
           QUITE unusual on Planet Earth.  There are lots of two season 
           climates on Earth, but they tend to have their dry season in the 
           winter (e.g., the Am and Aw climates we met above).
        2. What accounts for these climates is their position between the 
           Subtropical High and the Subpolar Low/Westerlies belts AND their 
           west coast locations (which brings those cold currents into play).
           a. In the summer, the Subtropical High moves poleward, breaks into 
              concentrated circular centers over the oceans, and strengthens.  
                i. Sometimes Mediterranean climates are covered by the 
                   subsiding air of these highs, which directly explains the 
                   hot, dry, Sahara-like weather they get in the summers.  
                   When this is going on, we often get gnarly smog situations, 
                   because this subsidence is essentially a doozy of an 
                   inversion layer, which can persist for days, even weeks, 
                   while we sit hoist in our own petard of pollution.
               ii. Most often, though, the oceanic highs are well out at sea, 
                   generating airflow towards the landmasses.  That air 
                   spiraling out of, say, the Hawai'ian High then passes over 
                   the cold California Current on its way to California, which 
                   causes the humidity in the air to be lost out at sea (you 
                   often see that moisture offshore as fog banks).  Bingo:  
                   dry air flow onshore and bone dry summers.
           b. In the winter, the Subtropical High shifts equatorward and 
              weakens by reconnecting over land.  This confers less protection 
              from storms.  Meanwhile, the Subpolar Low shifts equatorward, 
              too, but it strengthens by concentrating into two oceanic pits 
              of low pressure and convergent air flow, generating lots of 
              winter storms.  These, then, track over the land and their 
              precipitation affects Mediterranean climates (depending on the 
              path of the Polar Front Jet Stream).  Voilà! -- rainy, cool winters.
        3. These summer-dry subtropical climates are really pleasant amenity 
           climates and are actually quite rare.  You find them from about, 
           oh, 30° N or S to, maybe, 40° N or S, always on the west 
           sides of landmasses:
           a. The Mediterranean borderlands is the largest patch of this 
              climate, so it gets the honor of conferring its name on the 
              type:  parts of Spain and Portugal, southernmost France (the 
              Riviera), Italy, the Balkan coast, parts of Turkey and Syria, 
              Lebanon, Israel, Morocco.
           b. Most of California outside the deserts and highest mountains is 
              probably the next biggest patch.
           c. Central Chile (around Santiago) in western South America
           d. Southwesternmost Australia (around Perth) and another part on 
              the southwestern end of eastern Australia (around Melbourne) -- 
              sorry I can't describe it more exactly -- look at the map above.
        4. The Mediterranean climates are broken out into four subtypes that 
           are found in close proximity to one another, depending on local 
           topography (remember the normal lapse rate? It gets cooler up a 
           mountain, and that can affect summer high temperatures, which is 
           the basis of differentiating a, b, and c Mediterranean climates).
           a. Csa climates are Hot Summer Mediterranean climates, with at 
              least one summer month averaging above 22° C.  They tend to 
              get colder winters, too, experiencing the occasional frost.  In 
              California, we find them more inland, e.g., the San Fernando 
              Valley and much of the Great Central Valley.
           b. Csb climates are Warm Summer Mediterranean climates, which do 
              not have any month averaging above 22° C.  In California, we 
              find it on hillsides from about Ventura north and, in interior 
              California, on the hillsides overlooking interior valleys (e.g., 
              Sierra foothills above the Great Central Valley).    
           c. Csc climates are Short Summer Mediterranean occasionally found 
              at even higher locations.
           d. Csbn climates are Warm Summer Mediterranean climates with fog 
              ("nebel" in German).  These are found on the coastal plain and 
              lower hillsides from about San Pedro and the Channel Islands 
              north to the Oregon border.
           e. There is even a Dsb climate!  This is not a true Mediterranean 
              subtropical climate, but it's a montane climate you find at 
              pretty high elevations in Mediterranean areas, which shares the 
              summer-drought pattern.  These do get months averaging colder 
              than -3° C in the winter, receiving the bulk of their 
              precipitation as snow.  This is what you find in the Sierra, 
              Cascades, and the San Bernardino and San Gabriel high country 
              below timberline.
     C. Cw -- Temperate Wet and Dry climates are also found in the world (but 
        not in North America):  These are Subtropical Winter-Drought climates 
        ("w" is for winter dry season, just like we saw with the Aw climates 
        earlier).
        1. These get at least ten times as much rain in the wettest summer 
           month than they do in the driest winter month.
        2. They are mostly transitions from the Aw climate to the Cfa climate 
           wherever the two climates are found on the same landmass (which 
           knocks out North America).  So you see a transition from the dry 
           winter of the Tropical Wet and Dry climate to the wet all year 
           Humid Subtropical climate, and a transition from the heat of the A 
           climates to the mildness of the C climates.
        3. Looking at the map for such areas, we find them, predictably 
           enough, in: 
           a. South America in interior southern Brazil and Paraguay and 
              southeast Bolivia.
           b. Central and southeasternmost China.
           c. in southern and eastern Africa, especially around Tanzania and 
              Mozambique.

 VI. D or Humid continental climates.  The Df and Dw climates are sometimes 
     called Boreal climates.  These are the classic snowy winter climates.  As 
     a group, their coldest winter month must average below -3° C, but 
     their warmest month must average above 10° C (which turns out to be 
     the isotherm that limits tree growth:  Poleward or upslope from this 
     isotherm, trees are no longer viable).  
     A. Df climates are moist ("feucht") all year, being affected by the 
        Subpolar Low and effectively receiving precipitation from it all year 
        round.
        1. These climates are further subdivided into Dfa, Dfb, and Dfc 
           climates, just as we saw for the Cf and Cs climates (hot summer, 
           mild summer, and short summer).  There is also a Dfd climate, too 
           (coldest month must average below -38° C!!!!) found only in a 
           small area of Siberia.  I will treat the whole bunch as a group, 
           though.  Do remember that they get progressively nastier as you 
           move north and east.
        2. They are found poleward of the West Coast Marine (Cfb), Temperate 
           Semi-Arid (BSk), and Humid Subtropical (Cfa) climates.  That means 
           you only find them in the Northern Hemisphere (no large enough 
           landmass in the right latitudes in the Southern Hemisphere)..
        3. If you look at the map, you'll notice that these climates are not 
           found until really high latitudes on the west sides of landmasses 
           (60° N), but you find them at rather low latitudes (40 or 
           50° N) in the interior of the landmasses.  That's because the 
           moderating influence of the North Pacific Drift and the North 
           Atlantic Drift keeps the temperatures from plunging down to the 
           extremes required for this family of climates.  In the interiors, 
           however, you experience continentality, the low specific heat of 
           land (remember all that, how land heats up and cools down fast 
           compared to water?), so winter monthly average temperatures can 
           easily drop below -3° C.
        4. So, you find the Df climates from central Alaska through most of 
           Canada and into the American upper Midwest and New England and from 
           central Scandinavia down through Northeastern Europe, European 
           Russia, and western Siberia.
     B. Dw climates are basically the same thing, except they have a winter 
        dry season.  
        1. You find these only in the Old World, which is humongous enough 
           that most the moisture brought onshore by the Icelandic Low storms 
           and the Westerlies has been dropped on European Russia and western 
           Siberia, leaving nothing for points east.  
        2. So, you can see them on the map in North Korea, northeasternmost 
           China, and eastern Siberia.
     C. Ds climates are D climates with a summer dry season.  They are 
        basically highland climates in the Mediterranean complex of climates, 
        so I described them there, under Cs climates.

VII. E -- Way cold climates.  No month averages above 10° C.  Yeeeeee!
     A. ET or Tundra climates (phone home?).  
        1. These get at least one month averaging above freezing, 0° C.  
        2. Their soils contain permanently frozen water:  Permafrost.
        3. They are extremely windy: The Polar Easterlies dominate the tundra.
        4. But since they do average above freezing for a while in the summer, 
           this means they actually thaw out a bit in the summer.  The top 
           layers of the frozen soil water thaw out and dribble down the 
           landscape, creating pools in any depression (home to countless 
           mosquito larvae, the Alaska Air Force!).
        5. So they can actually support some plant growth.
           a. No trees:  They get knocked over by winds with the shallow root 
              structures necessary to live in the tundra. So, you're past 
              treeline here.
           b. So, you have a mix of low-lying vegetation: shrubs, grasses, 
              sedges, ephemeral wildflowers, mosses, lichens.
        6. You find tundra in really high latitude areas: 
           a. Along the northern and western coasts of North America north of 
              about 60° N.
           b. Along the southern coasts of Greenland and the northern coast of 
              Iceland.
           c. Along the northernmost coasts of Eurasia from northwestern 
              Norway to the Bering Strait.
           d. There's also a small bit in northernmost Antarctica near the 
              southern tip of South America, Tierra del Fuego at that southern 
              tip of South America, and the Falkland/Malvinas Islands 
              (remember that absurd war between the then-Argentine military 
              dictatorship trying to keep power through patriotism and the 
              British trying to hang onto a little tundra real-estate, some 
              sheep, and ..... a spy station?).
        7. There is also an alpine tundra climate, found on any mountain 
           taller than timberline.  Basically, the normal lapse rate cools the 
           climate up a mountain so much that it gets cold enough to preclude 
           tree growth.  Alpine tundra, like Arctic/Antarctic tundra, is also 
           very windy, which also prunes any ambitious plant.  You can find 
           alpine tundra even right on the equator, in the Andes in Ecuador 
           and Mt. Kenya in East Africa. 
     B. EF -- Frozen climate.  All months must average below freezing.
        1. This enables the preservation of any snow from summer melt.
        2. As a result, even small amounts of precipitation each year can 
           accumulate, year to year, building up glaciers.  
        3. There are two great continental glaciers in the world today, in 
           which the ice sheets can get thicker than 4 km!!! (2.5 miles of 
           ice!!!):
           a. Antarctican ice sheets (which the map doesn't show):
                i. East Antarctic ice sheet is on top of the Antarctican 
                   continent
               ii. West Antarctican ice sheet lies over water and is so thick 
                   and heavy that its bottom has sagged 2 km below sea level 
                   in its center.
              iii. Seventy percent of the world's fresh water supply is in the 
                   Antarctican ice.
           b. Greenland ice sheet covers nearly all of the world's largest 
              island (this does show on the map).
        4. During the different ice advances of the Pleistocene (the last one 
           peaked about 18,000 years ago), there were more such huge glaciers, 
           and about a third of the earth's land was covered in ice! Awesome!
           a. The Laurentide ice sheet covered most of Canada and portions of 
              the northern US.
           b. The Cordilleran ice sheet covered western Canada and southern 
              Alaska.
           c. The Scandinavian ice sheet covered, well, Scandinavia and 
              northern Europe (the British Isles, northern France, Germany, 
              Poland, and western Russia.
           d. The Kara ice sheet covered most of northern European Russia, 
              while the Barents ice sheet covered a lot of the Arctic north of 
              Scandinavia and European Russia.
           e. The Inuitian ice sheet covered northernmost Canada .
           f. The Antarctican ice sheet was much huger.
           g. There were large glaciers in most mountain ranges.           
           h. I don't expect you to memorize these Pleistocene glaciers:  I 
              was just trying to give you a sense of the scale of the 
              Pleistocene glaciation. Just remember that a large chunk of real 
              estate (30-35% of the land) was covered in Antarctica- and 
              Greenland-like ice sheets or in alpine glaciers. Later in the 
              semester, we'll cover glacial processes in more detail.

VIII.H means Highland climates.  This is sort of a catchbag for the 
     microclimatic variation you get in mountains.  
     A. Climate in highlands is affected by the normal lapse rate, which makes 
        it colder and colder the higher up you go
     B. It is also affected by aspect: Where the mountainside faces.
        1. North-south aspect:
           a. The side facing the equator is warmer and drier.  This is called 
              the adrêt side (south-facing slope in the Northern 
              Hemisphere; north-facing slope in the Southern Hemisphere).
           b. The side facing the poles is shaded and, so, cooler and moister.  
              This is called the ubac slope (north-facing slope in the 
              Northern Hemisphere; south-facing slope in the Southern 
              Hemisphere).  
        2. Windward-leeward aspect
           a. Windward slopes are moister and more moderate in temperature 
              because they experience the uplift of humid air.
           b. Leeward slopes are drier and hotter because of adiabatic heating 
              and drying of descending air.  This is the rainshadow slope.
     C. On a small-scale map, H climates are just shown as an undifferentiated 
        color (bright orange on the map above; often black on other maps).  
        Remember, though, that these are zones of unbelievably complex 
        microclimatic variation induced by elevation and aspect.

Well, that is one fast whirlwind tour of the world's major climate types.  Be 
able to recognize generally where you should expect to find each of them and 
why: tropical rainforest, tropical monsoon, tropical wet and dry; tropical 
desert, tropical semi-arid, temperate desert, temperate semi-arid; humid 
subtropical, Mediterranean, west coast marine, temperate wet and dry; humid 
continental; tundra; and frozen climates.  You now know what to expect when 
you travel and can pick vacation spots that have climates similar to other 
places you like.  Hey, you could do travel consulting! Our department does offer 
a course, Geography 352, 
Geography of Travel and Tourism.

Hey -- can anyone recognize the projection for the Köppen-Geiger map 
above?  No, I won't test you on it.  Just hoping to make some older 
information stick even if I don't test you! It was covered in the section on 
maps.



--------------------

Document and © maintained by Dr. Rodrigue
First placed on web: 10/23/00
Last revised: 06/16/07

--------------------