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Lornshill Academy
Geography Department
National Revision
Physical Environments – Weather
Weather – Revision Sheets
What you need to know:
1. Factors that affect the weather: a) latitude; b) altitude; c) distance from the sea; d)
aspect; e) ocean currents.
2. Air Masses
3. Weather Station Symbols & Synoptic Charts
4. Depressions
5. Anticyclones
6. The effects of the weather
1. Factors that affect the weather
a) Latitude:
Generally, the closer to the equator a place is, the
higher the temperature; the closer to the poles
(North and South), the colder it is. Why is this?
The sun’s rays have to pass through more of the
atmosphere at the Poles and so more of it is
reflected before it can heat up the ground. The
opposite is true at the Equator:
b) Altitude:
For every 100m above sea level you go up, the temperature drops by 1 degree Celsius. So
places on flat, low lying land are warmer than places higher up.
c) Distance from the sea:
Oceans and Seas take a long time to heat up, and a long time cool down, whereas land heats
up and cools down much more quickly. Because of this, how close a place is to the sea
influences the temperature:
In the summer time – being close to the
sea makes it cooler. Go inland and it will get
warmer.
In the winter time – being close to the sea
makes it warmer. Go inland and it will get
colder.
The places shown in the picture are all at
the same latitude. It shows us maximum and
minimum temperatures at each place. Max
temps are higher and min temps lower (i.e a
greater temp. range) with distance from the
sea.
d) Aspect:
Aspect is the direction in which land, a slope or a building faces. The aspect will affect how
much sunshine a place receives and its temperature. In Britain, places with a southerly
aspect (facing the south) will have much more sunshine and will generally be warmer than
those with a northerly aspect (facing the north).
e) Ocean Currents:
A warm current will
increase temperatures in
an area, a cold current
will lower them. Western
coastal areas are warmer
in the UK due to a warm
ocean current.
2. Air Masses that influence Britain:
Where air is stationary for
long periods of time, it starts
to take on the temperature
and humidity (or moisture)
properties of the land or sea
beneath it. This is how an air
mass is formed. An air mass
is simply a large chunk (or
‘mass’) of air with the same
temperature and humidity
properties.
The UK finds itself at the
meeting point of 5 main air
masses – all of which can
affect us from time to time.
As our prevailing winds (most
common winds) blow from the
West or South-west, it is the
Polar Maritime and Tropical
Maritime air masses that
affect us most often. Where these two air masses meet we get depressions forming.
3. Weather Station Circles &
Synoptic Charts
After recording the weather using
various weather instruments, the
information can be displayed in a
weather station circle, and you may
see these displayed on weather
maps. They tell us about 5 different
elements of the weather.
A Synoptic Chart is a more detailed
weather map which shows what type
of weather system is moving over
Britain. Synoptic charts often have
weather circles shown on them.
These circles describe the weather
in a given location. The main
weather element shown on a
synoptic chart is air pressure.
Isobar lines, which join up areas of
equal air pressure, are drawn on
these maps. The pattern these lines
make shows areas of low or high
pressure.
4. The weather in a depression (low pressure):
A depression is an area of low air pressure – formed by warm air pushing upwards over cold
air. In Britain these normally move across the country from west to east.
The most obvious signs on a weather map (or ‘synoptic chart’) that you are looking at a
depression are the ‘fronts’ which bring rain:
Occluded
Front = sudden downpours
Cold Front =
heavy rain
showers
Warm Front =
steady,
continuous rain
When you see these symbols on a weather map you know the question is asking about a
depression. You should be able to talk about how the weather changes in different parts of a
depression. There are 5 elements of the weather you can talk about:

Temperature

Cloud Cover

Precipitation

Wind Speed

Wind Direction
Temperature in a depression:
Anywhere else - outside the warm
sector will be getting colder air –
pushing down from further north…
Anywhere inside this triangle between the cold and warm fronts, will be
getting warmer temperatures. This is ‘the warm sector of the
depression’ and the air here has pushed up from the Tropics.
Cloud Cover in a depression:
Cloud Cover is at it’s most (8 octas) anywhere underneath a front (it doesn’t matter if it’s
the warm front, cold front or occluded front). Between the warm and cold fronts (in the
middle of the warm sector), the clouds might clear up to 4/5 octas – but then will cloud over
again as the cold front passes.
Once the cold front passes the skies will eventually clear up to 0/1 octas cloud cover as the
depression moves away.
Precipitation in a depression:
This is similar to cloud cover (as the two are obviously linked to each other). Precipitation
will definitely be falling anywhere underneath a front (and again, it doesn’t matter what
type of front this is). In the middle of the warm sector as the skies clear a little, the
precipitation might slow down and turn to drizzle, before getting heavy again as the cold
front passes.
Once the cold front passes the precipitation will eventually stop as the depression moves
away.
Why is it cloudy and why does it rain at the fronts in a depression?
Have a look at the diagram below. The following steps happen at the fronts:
1. The warm air is being forced to rise over the colder (heavier) air when the two air masses
meet.
2. As it rises upwards it cools down.
3. This allows condensation to happen and clouds form.
4. Eventually, rain drops / ice crystals in the cloud will become too big and will fall downwards
out of the cloud – as precipitation.
Wind Speed in a depression:
Isobars are lines that join places of equal air pressure. (On a weather map, they are the
equivalent of contour lines on an OS map).
Where the isobars are
close together, the wind
speed will be faster.
Low
Where the isobars are
further apart, the wind
speed will be slower.
Wind Direction in a depression:
In the northern hemisphere, wind always blows parallel (in line with) the isobars, anticlockwise around the circles of a depression:
Low
There is a distinct sequence of weather when a depression passes:
o a few high clouds appear in the sky;
o the clouds then thicken and darken and air pressure starts to fall; the clouds
become lower in the sky and it starts to rain;
o the wind changes direction and then the warm front arrives;
o the arrival of warm air brings higher temperatures;
o the rain stops for a while and the sky clears (in the warm sector),
o clouds build up again to bring heavy rain;
o the cold front arrives along with colder temperatures;
o the cold front passes and the rain stops - the skies clear.
5. The weather in an anticyclone (high pressure):
An anticyclone is an area of high air pressure – when air is pushing down on to the surface of
the Earth. Where this happens the weather is more gentle and stable than in a depression.
A weather map showing an anticyclone will not have the symbols showing you the fronts
of a depression. It will still have the isobars – and the air pressure is normally over 1000
millibars. It is important that you look at the time of year on any anticyclone weather map –
because the weather they bring in the summer is different to the weather they bring in the
winter.
Anticyclone in the Summer = Warm, dry weather
Anticyclone in the Winter = Cold, dry weather
You can still talk about the same 5 elements of the weather:
Temperature in an anticyclone:
The temperature is hot in the summer and cold in the winter – across the whole of the area
covered by the anticyclone.
Cloud Cover and Precipitation in an anticyclone:
There are clear skies in an anticyclone (0/1 octas) and no precipitation. This is because as air
drops to push down on the surface (which is what’s happening in an anticyclone), the air
warms up a little, causing evaporation to happen, which causes any clouds (and so chance of
precipitation) to disappear.
The clear skies explain why it is so cold in winter (no clouds to keep the heat in), and so hot
in summer (no clouds to block the sunshine), in an anticyclone. In winter this can cause
freezing fog (as the cold ground chills the air above it). Occasionally in summer the heat can
cause convectional thunderstorms.
Wind Speed in an anticyclone:
The isobars are always far apart in an anticyclone. This means that there are never any
strong winds – any wind there is will be calm.
Wind Direction in an anticyclone:
If there is any wind in an anticyclone, it always blows clockwise parallel to the isobars:
HIGH
6. The effects of the weather
Different types of weather are enjoyed or disliked by different groups of people:
o Low air pressure (depression) in summer results in cool, cloudy, windy and wet weather
which is welcomed by water companies which need water for their reservoirs but disliked
by holidaymakers who want warm, sunny weather for sunbathing, swimming and other
holiday activities.
o Low air pressure (depression) in winter results in mild, cloudy, rainy, windy weather
which is welcomed by water companies but disliked by outdoor sportspeople who want
drier and sunnier weather for their activities.
o High air pressure (anticyclone) during the summer results in hot, sunny and dry weather
which is enjoyed by holidaymakers and sportspeople but disliked by farmers who need
rain for their crops.
o High air pressure (anticyclone) in winter results in cold weather with snow and ice which
is enjoyed by skiers but disliked by drivers and pilots. Snow and ice are disliked by
drivers and pilots because they create difficult and dangerous driving and flying
conditions.