Which of the following describes the general climate in climate zones at low latitude?❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ Precipitation levels and average temperatures are high. Precipitation levels and average temperatures are low. Precipitation levels are high, and the average temperatures are low. Precipitation levels are low, and the average temperatures are high.
Answers
Answer:
Earth's Major Climatic Zones
The Earth's surface can be divided into three major regional zones based on the three global convection cells that control average rainfall and average temperatures. The edges of the zones fall roughly along lines of latitude. The three zones are the tropical zone, the temperate zone and the polar zone. These zones have been subdivided using the Köppen-Geiger climate classification system.
Two Köppen-Geiger climate zones that occur across the three major regional zones are the Dry Zone and the Polar-Highland Subclimate. The Dry Zone is subdivided into the Desert Subclimate where average annual rainfall is less than 10 inches per year and the Semiarid Subclimate where rainfall averages slightly over 10 inches of rain per year.
In the Dry Zone, evaporation exceeds precipitation. The Dry Zone designation does not depend on temperature.
The Polar-Highland Subclimate has widely variable temperatures, depending on elevation, latitude and orientation. Elevation controls the climatic conditions in the Polar-Highland Subclimate. Mountains scattered around the world have Polar-Highland Subclimate conditions in their upper elevations.
Atmosphere, Ocean and Temperature
While the difference between the average equator temperature and the poles' temperatures may seem extreme, the difference would be much greater without Earth's atmosphere. The equator would become very hot and the poles become even colder. Solar energy drives equator weather patterns, absorbing heat into thunderstorms and transferring heat from the atmosphere to the ocean as rain.
Convection currents in the atmosphere cause wind patterns that move heat from the equator toward the poles. Ocean currents warmed by the Sun's energy carry heat from the equator toward the poles as well. Evaporation of surface water, rain and other precipitation, wind and ocean currents move warm air toward the poles and bring cold air toward the equator.
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Answer: Desert: Earth's deserts are known to be hot, as well as dry, with rainfall very uncommon.
Explanation:
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