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Chapter 2
and 3 Notes
Climate
 Climate:
 Natural
Vegetation: is the plant life that
grows in an area if the natural
environment has not been changed by
people.
 Five Major Climate Regions: 1) tropical, 2)
dry, 3) mid-latitude, 4) high latitude, 5)
highland.
Tropical Climates
 Tropical
climate regions are found in or
near the low latitudes, the tropics.
 The two kinds of tropical climate regions
are:
 tropical rain forest and tropical
savanna.
Tropical Climate
 Tropical
Rain Forest Climate: Hot and wet
 Found near the Equator.
 Direct rays of sun keep the
temperatures high, average 80°F.
 Vegetation grows thick in layers formed
at different heights.
 Amazon River basin in South America
contains the world’s largest tropical rain
forest.
Tropical Climates
 Tropical
Savanna Climate: Areas that
have a dry season in winter and a wet
season in summer are called tropical
savanna climate regions.
 In
the dry season the tough ground is covered
with clumps of coarse grass.
Dry Climate
 Dry
Climates: Because of vegetation, dry
climate regions are also divided into two
types, desert and steppe.
Dry Climates
 Little
plant life.
 Little rain
 Underground springs, however may
support an oasis.
 Oasis:
 Cold
an area of lush vegetation.
at night and warm at day.
Dry Climates
 Steppe
Climate:
 Dry areas
 Often border deserts.
Mid-Latitude Climates
 The
world has four mid-latitude climate
regions.




Marine West Coast
Mediterranean
Humid subtropical
Humid continental
Mid-Latitude Climates
 Marine
West Coast Climate: Cool
summers, and mild but wet winters.
 Deciduous Trees and Mixed forests.
 Marine west coast climate regions
cover much of western Europe and as
well as the Pacific coast of North
America.
Mid-Latitude Climates
 Mediterranean
Climate: Have mild rainy
winters and hot, sunny summers.
 These regions are generally found in
coastal lands between latitudes 30°
and 40° north and south.
 Dense forests=chaparral.
Mid-Latitude Climate
 Humid
Subtropical Climate: Humid
subtropical climate regions are
generally found at mid-latitudes in the
southeastern parts of continents.
 Here
a pattern of win and high pressure
related to nearby oceans causes high
humidity.
 Vegetation in humid subtropical climate
regions includes both grasslands are forests.
 Grasslands that lie inland are known as prairie
lands.
Mid-Latitude Climates
 Humid
Continental Climate: The fourth
type of mid-latitude climate is the
humid continental climate.
 These
regions are more influenced by
landmasses than by winds, precipitation, or
ocean temperatures.
 These regions are located only in the Northern
Hemisphere.
High Latitude Climates
 High
Latitude Climates: There are three
types of high latitude climates:



Subarctic
Tundra
Ice cap
 Temperatures
average below freezing for half
the year.
 In some places only a thin layer of surface soil
thaws.
 The frozen subsoil is known as permafrost.
High Latitude Climates
 Subarctic
Climate: The subarctic severe
conditions limit the variety of plant life.
 Geographers
often use taiga, the Russian
word for this forest, to refer to subarctic
climate regions in general.
High Latitude Climates
 Tundra
Climate: Like the subarctic
climate region, the tundra climate
regions have bitterly cold winters with
greatly reduced sunlight.
 The
tundra region’s thin soil above the
permafrost supports certain low plants during
the short summers.
 Mosses, bushes, very short grasses, and
lichens, plants that grow on rocks, survive on
the treeless plain.
High Latitude Climates
 Ice
Cap Climate: Because monthly
temperatures average below freezing,
ice cap climate regions support no
vegetation.
 The
land surface is constantly covered by
snow and ice, sometimes more than 2 miles.
 The earth’s greatest polar ice cap spreads
over almost all of Antarctica.
Highland Climates
 Highland
Climates: In mountain areas the
climate varies with elevation. The higher
the altitude, the cooler air becomes.
 Elevation also influences vegetation.
 Above the timberline, the elevation
above which it is too cold for trees to
grow, are scattered tundra plants.
People, Climate, and
Environment
 People,
Climate, and Environment:
Climate affects the kinds of clothing
people wear and the kinds of houses they
build.
 Changes that people make in the
environment also affect climate.
People, Climate, and
Environment

Adaptations: People adapt to the climate.
In cold regions people build well-insulated
houses with furnaces or other means of heating.
 Houses in deserts often have light-colored roofs
to reflect the sun’s heat.
 In wet regions houses may have steep, pointed
roofs so that rain or snow run off easily.
 Climate affects transportation.


In some tropical rain forests, plants and trees grow
so quickly that building and maintaining roads is
very difficult.
People, Climate, and
Environment

Climatic Changes: Climates change
gradually over time.
During the last 1 to 2 million years, for example,
the earth passed through four eras when large
areas were covered with glaciers.
 Geographers have developed several possible
explanations for what caused glacial eras:



1) One is that variations in the sun’s output of
energy and in the earth’s orbit may have caused
our world to absorb less solar energy and cool off.
2) Another hypothesis, or scientific explanation,
suggest that volcanic activity, which put massive
amounts of dust in the atmosphere, might have had
a cooling effect.
People, Climate, and
Environment
 Geographers
also believe that human activity
causes changes in the world’s climates.



Particles in smoke from the burning of fossil fuels
may stay in the air for years, scattering the sun’s
rays.
This reduces the sunlight reaching the ground,
lowering the temperature.
The exhaust from automobiles helps create
smog, a haze caused by the sun’s ultra violet
radiation.

Smog endangers people’s health.
People, Climate, and
Environment
 People
also affect climate through water
projects, such as dams and river diversions.

Dams built for industrial water supplies or for
irrigation sometimes cause new areas to
become dry.