what are seasonal winds?
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Answered by
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Hello mate here is your answer.
A seasonal wind is generated by a seasonal phenomenon such as a greater insolation during the summer or austral summer.
For example, India is surrounded by the sea and when the sun is higher in the sky, the land gets warmer and the air rises. That brings moist air from the surrounding sea and it causes what we call, the monsoon.
As spring comes to Greenland, the cold air from the central glacier falls in the coastal fjords. That causes a so-called, katabatic wind. Sometimes it is so strong that it has been destroying Inuit villages.
Such weather pattern will be found anywhere on earth, as the insolation varies with the seasons
Hope it helps you.
A seasonal wind is generated by a seasonal phenomenon such as a greater insolation during the summer or austral summer.
For example, India is surrounded by the sea and when the sun is higher in the sky, the land gets warmer and the air rises. That brings moist air from the surrounding sea and it causes what we call, the monsoon.
As spring comes to Greenland, the cold air from the central glacier falls in the coastal fjords. That causes a so-called, katabatic wind. Sometimes it is so strong that it has been destroying Inuit villages.
Such weather pattern will be found anywhere on earth, as the insolation varies with the seasons
Hope it helps you.
Answered by
0
Answer:
Seasonal winds are movements of air repetitively and predictably driven by changes in large-scale weather patterns. Seasonal winds occur in many locations throughout the world. ... A monsoon is a wind in low-latitude climates that seasonally changes direction between winter and summer.
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