Factors that Affect Climate
What is climate?
• Climate is the average weather conditions
over a long period of time
– Includes average temperatures and
precipitation, wind patterns, humidity,
air pressure
• Weather is what it is NOW, climate is what
it SHOULD BE.
How is this different from
“weather”?
• Weather changes day to day.
• Weather can fall inside normal ranges or
outside of what is expected from the
climate- “above or below average”
• Climate is the benchmark; what we expect
NJ Averages
• Average April Precip: 4.60 in.
• 4/30/14 Precip: 3.24 in.
• Average May High Temp: 71°F
• Today’s high: 67°F
Climate Factors
Temperature Factors (LADBWOC!)
• Latitude
• Altitude
• Distance to a Body of Water
• Ocean Currents
Precipitation Factors (TP)
• Topography
• Prevailing Winds
How does Latitude affect
climate? (the angular distance N or S of the
equator)
• Latitude is the most
significant factor for
determining climate
• Warmer at the
equator
• Colder at the poles –
in general
• Seasons are
REVERSED between
N. and S. Hemisphere
How does Altitude affect
climate?
• As you go up in
altitude, you go down
in temperature and
sometimes
precipitation
How does the Distance from large
bodies of water affect climate?
• Large bodies of water
regulate temperature due
to water’s properties.
• The ocean thermostat-
keeps it warmer in
winter and cooler in the
summer
– less fluctuation
• Inland climate have more
extreme temperature
fluctuations throughout
the year
How do nearby Ocean Currents affect the
climate?
• Warm and cold ocean currents bring warm moist air near
to coastal areas.
• Great Britain is an example – latitude position puts it in
the cold and dry climate zone
• However it is moist and warmer due to the Gulf Stream,
a warm current.
How do the Prevailing winds
affect climate? Prevailing
winds are winds that blow predominantly from a single
general direction over a particular point on the Earth's
surface.
• Global winds are
generated by the
rotation of the earth
and move air around
the globe.
• Prevailing winds (like
the Trade Winds)
regulate climate
• Winds bring storms,
air masses of different
temps.
How does Topography affect
the climate?
• The lay of the ground
plays an important
role in regulating
climate
• Ex. The windward
side of a coastal
mountain range is
wetter than the
leeward side – rain
shadow effect
www.olympicrainshadow.com
Other Factors- Plate Tectonics
• Tectonic plates have shifted
across Earth’s surface for
billions of years
• Greenland and Antarctica
used to be tropical
• S. Africa had glaciers
• NJ had volcanoes
• Most of the Western U.S.
was underwater
Other Factors- Volcanic Eruptions
• Volcanoes can warm AND cool the planet
• Volcanoes emit CO2 which is a
greenhouse gas  global warming
• But volcanoes also emit SO2 and aerosols
(tiny solid particles) that REFLECT
sunlight back into space
– Less radiation reaches Earth  COOLING
% Change in Solar Radiation
www.esrl.noaa.gov
Ice Ages
• Earth naturally fluctuates between ice
ages and interglacial periods
• ICE AGE- an era of cooler than normal
global temperatures
• INTERGLACIAL PERIOD- era of warmer
than normal temps.
• Scientists claim the next ice age is 50,000
years away
Other Factors- Astronomy
• Milankovitch Cycles: Flux in Earth’s orbit
and Earth’s axis over long time periods
What We Know- Facts
• Earth’s climate HAS changed many times
over time naturally
• Our climate IS changing right NOW, but
it’s different than ever documented before
– WHY????
• Humans adding GHGs has warmed the
planet in the past 200 yrs  This is FACT
Looking at Climatograms
• Your group will get “pairs” of cities to compare
climates
• Write down a list of observations from each graph
for each city: highest temp, highest precip.,
trends, patterns, etc.
• Determine which climate factor is affecting the
climates of these cities and provide at least 1
piece of factual evidence to support your claim.
• You can use Google maps to help locate
Practice- NYC vs. Sydney
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
J F M A M J J A S O N D
Precipitation
(mm)
Temperature
(deg.
C)
Months
New York, NY
Precip
Temp
NYC Climate Facts
• Warmest months: June, July, August
• Consistently around 100 mm precip/month
• Coldest months: Dec, Jan, Feb.
• Coastal City (Atlantic Ocean)
• N. Hemisphere: 40.7° N
• Elevation: sea level (0)
Practice- NYC vs. Sydney
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
0
5
10
15
20
25
J F M A M J J A S O N D
Precipitation
(mm)
Temperature
(deg.
C)
Months
Sydney, Australia
Precip (mm)
Temp (C)
Sydney Climate Facts:
• Warmest months: Dec., Jan, Feb
• Coldest months: May, June, July, Aug
• Precipitation averages to ~100 mm/month
• Coastal city
• Southern Hemisphere: 34° S
• Elevation: sea level
Which factor?
• Latitude?
• Altitude?
• Distance to Body of Water?
• Ocean Currents?
• Topography?
• Prevailing Winds?
City Pairs
• Chico, CA vs. Reno, NV
• Norfolk, VA vs. San Francisco, CA
• Estes Park, CO vs. Lincoln, NE
• Boston, MA vs. Minneapolis, MN

Factors that Affect Climate Powerpoint..

  • 1.
  • 2.
    What is climate? •Climate is the average weather conditions over a long period of time – Includes average temperatures and precipitation, wind patterns, humidity, air pressure • Weather is what it is NOW, climate is what it SHOULD BE.
  • 3.
    How is thisdifferent from “weather”? • Weather changes day to day. • Weather can fall inside normal ranges or outside of what is expected from the climate- “above or below average” • Climate is the benchmark; what we expect
  • 4.
    NJ Averages • AverageApril Precip: 4.60 in. • 4/30/14 Precip: 3.24 in. • Average May High Temp: 71°F • Today’s high: 67°F
  • 5.
    Climate Factors Temperature Factors(LADBWOC!) • Latitude • Altitude • Distance to a Body of Water • Ocean Currents Precipitation Factors (TP) • Topography • Prevailing Winds
  • 6.
    How does Latitudeaffect climate? (the angular distance N or S of the equator) • Latitude is the most significant factor for determining climate • Warmer at the equator • Colder at the poles – in general • Seasons are REVERSED between N. and S. Hemisphere
  • 7.
    How does Altitudeaffect climate? • As you go up in altitude, you go down in temperature and sometimes precipitation
  • 8.
    How does theDistance from large bodies of water affect climate? • Large bodies of water regulate temperature due to water’s properties. • The ocean thermostat- keeps it warmer in winter and cooler in the summer – less fluctuation • Inland climate have more extreme temperature fluctuations throughout the year
  • 9.
    How do nearbyOcean Currents affect the climate? • Warm and cold ocean currents bring warm moist air near to coastal areas. • Great Britain is an example – latitude position puts it in the cold and dry climate zone • However it is moist and warmer due to the Gulf Stream, a warm current.
  • 10.
    How do thePrevailing winds affect climate? Prevailing winds are winds that blow predominantly from a single general direction over a particular point on the Earth's surface. • Global winds are generated by the rotation of the earth and move air around the globe. • Prevailing winds (like the Trade Winds) regulate climate • Winds bring storms, air masses of different temps.
  • 11.
    How does Topographyaffect the climate? • The lay of the ground plays an important role in regulating climate • Ex. The windward side of a coastal mountain range is wetter than the leeward side – rain shadow effect
  • 12.
  • 13.
    Other Factors- PlateTectonics • Tectonic plates have shifted across Earth’s surface for billions of years • Greenland and Antarctica used to be tropical • S. Africa had glaciers • NJ had volcanoes • Most of the Western U.S. was underwater
  • 14.
    Other Factors- VolcanicEruptions • Volcanoes can warm AND cool the planet • Volcanoes emit CO2 which is a greenhouse gas  global warming • But volcanoes also emit SO2 and aerosols (tiny solid particles) that REFLECT sunlight back into space – Less radiation reaches Earth  COOLING
  • 15.
    % Change inSolar Radiation www.esrl.noaa.gov
  • 16.
    Ice Ages • Earthnaturally fluctuates between ice ages and interglacial periods • ICE AGE- an era of cooler than normal global temperatures • INTERGLACIAL PERIOD- era of warmer than normal temps. • Scientists claim the next ice age is 50,000 years away
  • 17.
    Other Factors- Astronomy •Milankovitch Cycles: Flux in Earth’s orbit and Earth’s axis over long time periods
  • 18.
    What We Know-Facts • Earth’s climate HAS changed many times over time naturally • Our climate IS changing right NOW, but it’s different than ever documented before – WHY???? • Humans adding GHGs has warmed the planet in the past 200 yrs  This is FACT
  • 19.
    Looking at Climatograms •Your group will get “pairs” of cities to compare climates • Write down a list of observations from each graph for each city: highest temp, highest precip., trends, patterns, etc. • Determine which climate factor is affecting the climates of these cities and provide at least 1 piece of factual evidence to support your claim. • You can use Google maps to help locate
  • 20.
    Practice- NYC vs.Sydney 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 J F M A M J J A S O N D Precipitation (mm) Temperature (deg. C) Months New York, NY Precip Temp
  • 21.
    NYC Climate Facts •Warmest months: June, July, August • Consistently around 100 mm precip/month • Coldest months: Dec, Jan, Feb. • Coastal City (Atlantic Ocean) • N. Hemisphere: 40.7° N • Elevation: sea level (0)
  • 22.
    Practice- NYC vs.Sydney 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 0 5 10 15 20 25 J F M A M J J A S O N D Precipitation (mm) Temperature (deg. C) Months Sydney, Australia Precip (mm) Temp (C)
  • 23.
    Sydney Climate Facts: •Warmest months: Dec., Jan, Feb • Coldest months: May, June, July, Aug • Precipitation averages to ~100 mm/month • Coastal city • Southern Hemisphere: 34° S • Elevation: sea level
  • 24.
    Which factor? • Latitude? •Altitude? • Distance to Body of Water? • Ocean Currents? • Topography? • Prevailing Winds?
  • 25.
    City Pairs • Chico,CA vs. Reno, NV • Norfolk, VA vs. San Francisco, CA • Estes Park, CO vs. Lincoln, NE • Boston, MA vs. Minneapolis, MN