Transcript Climate
Earth’s
tilt and revolution cause changes in
seasons
Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn mark points
furthest north and south that the sun’s rays
shine directly overhead at noon
This day is called the solstice (summer and
winter)
Equinox: days and nights all over the world
are equal in length (spring and fall)
Weather:
condition of atmosphere at a
particular location and time
Climate: conditions over a long period of
time (Georgia has a temperate climate)
Precipitation
Cloud
(water vapor)
cover
Landforms and bodies of water (water heats
and cools slowly, land quickly)
Elevation (higher elevations have thinner air
and cannot hold moisture)
Air movement
Wind: distributes the sun’s heat through
convection (transfer of heat by upward motion
of air)
Ocean currents: warm currents flow away from
the equator and toward the poles, cold flows
back to equator, they also move heat throughout
the globe
Latitudes: low(tropical) always hot, middle
(varies), high (polar) always cold
Elevation: temperature drops about 3.5 degrees
F for every 1000 feet
Topography: cool winds on windward side, dry
and warmer on leeward side
El
Nino: natural change in climate off west
coast of South America, easterly winds
change direction, warm water and heavy
rains push toward Americas, drought in Asia
and Australia
La Nina: warm water blows toward Pacific
Rim, precipitation in India, dryness in
Americas
Can you guess which one we are currently
experiencing?
Ecosystem:
community of plants and animals
Biome: specific region
Forests: broadleaf (deciduous) trees/rain
forest, needle leaf (coniferous) cone
bearing/pine
Grasslands: flat, few trees, tropical savanna,
Northern Hemisphere has steppe/prairie
Desert and tundra: extreme dry or cold
climates