Geography, asked by simmi2880, 1 year ago

The Roaring Forties in the southern hemisphere(a) blow towards the equator.
(b) blow in the areas around 40° S parallel.(c) blow from the subpolar region of low pressure.(d) blow around 40° N parallel.

Answers

Answered by Arslankincsem
11

The southern hemisphere is less hindered by the land mass when comparedto the northern counterpard.


The roaring forties in the southern hemisphere blow round 400 N parallel.


This is possible that the winds become roaring forties.


The roaring forties get the air that very near to the equator and go towards the poles.


This is ideal for the global scale wind pattern.


The winds at the 40 degree is regarded as the roaring forties.

Answered by pragyan07sl
0

Answer:

The Roaring Forties in the southern hemisphere (b) blow in the areas around 40° S parallel.

Explanation:

  • The Roaring Forties are solid westerly breezes tracked down in the Southern Hemisphere, by and large between the scopes of 40° and 50°.
  • The Roaring Forties were a significant guide to ships cruising the Brouwer Route from Europe toward the East Indies or Australasia during the Age of Sail, and in present-day utilization are inclined toward by yachtsmen on round-the-world journeys and rivalries.
  • The limits of the Roaring Forties are not steady, and shift north or south relying upon the season.
  • They blow with incredible strength and steadiness.
  • Their bearing is by and large from North-West to East in the Southern Hemisphere.
  • Cloudy skies, downpours and crude weather conditions are for the most part connected with them.
  • The solid west-to-east air flows are brought about by the blend of air being uprooted from the Equator towards the South Pole and the Earth's revolution, and there are not many bodies of land to act as windbreaks.
  • The Roaring Forties are solid westerly breezes that blow in the Southern Hemisphere somewhere in the range of 40° and 50° South scopes.
  • The strong west-to-east air flows are made by a blend of air being driven from the Equator towards the South Pole, the Earth's pivot, and the shortage of expanses of land at such scopes to act as windbreaks.
  • The Roaring Forties were named by the primary mariners to have explored these scopes during the Age of Sail (1571-1862).
  • The Roaring Forties, nonetheless, are not straight/ linear.
  • In the southern summer, they shift southward, and during southern winter, they push north toward the equator.
  • The strong breezes assisted commanders and boats with cruising quicker from west to east, from Europe, and through the Brouwer Route, using Cape of Good Hope, across the Indian Ocean, and toward Australasia or the East Indies.
  • The quick entries were alluded to and depicted as "to run the easting down."

Thus, the correct and final answer is (b) blow in the areas around 40° S parallel.     

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