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Weather Fronts Air Masses • Global winds result from large amounts of air moving from high pressure to low. • A large, homogenous parcel of air is called an air mass. • These huge masses of air can cover 100 million hectares from the ground to the tropopause. Types of Air Masses • Air masses are named for two properties of the air in the mass—its temperature and water content. • Dry air masses begin over land masses (continents) and are called continental. • Wet air masses start over oceans and are called maritime (from Latin “of the sea”). • Cold air masses form near the north and south poles, so we call them polar. • Warm air masses come from the tropics and are called tropical. • The four types of air mass are continental polar, continental tropical, maritime polar, and maritime tropical. Fronts • The place where two air masses come together is called a front, because it is often the first part we see of a storm. • A storm front can be dangerous, bringing strong wind, heavy rain, lightning, or tornadoes. Types of Fronts • Fronts are divided into types based on how the air masses are moving. • Each type of front has different line to show it on a weather map. Cold Fronts • When a polar air mass is moving toward a tropical mass, we call it a cold front. • Cold fronts are represented by a blue line with triangles showing which way the front is moving. • Cold fronts push warm air up as they pass causing clouds and storms to form ahead of a cold front. Warm Fronts • When a tropical air mass runs into a polar one, we call it a warm front. • Warm fronts are shown with a red line and semicircles to show the direction of movement. • The warm air is forced up and over the cold air often forming clouds ahead of the front. Stationary Fronts • When polar and tropical air masses pass by each other in opposite directions, we call it a stationary front. • A stationary front is shown by alternating blue triangles and red semicircles. • The weather tends to be milder than with warm or cold fronts, but since the rain is likely to continue for hours or days it can cause flooding. Occluded Fronts • When a tropical mass gets caught between two polar masses, we call it an occluded front. • Occluded fronts are shown by alternating triangles and semicircles in blue or purple. • The warm mass is forced up and over the slower moving cold mass, created cold rains or in winter snow or freezing rain.