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Chapter 27 Waiting for the Rains: The Effects of Monsoons in South Asia 27.1 Introduction Monsoons – strong and violent seasonal winds blow in from the ocean each summer, carrying with them clouds heavy with moisture • Almost all of the rain in South Asia each year comes from these rains 27.2 The Geographic Setting Indian Subcontinent – is the giant triangle peninsula located in the Indian Ocean • 1 out of every 5 people on earth lives in South Asia • Most of these people are farmers who both look forward to and fear the rain 27.2 Continued How are Monsoons Created? • Atmospheric Pressure Change 1. There is high pressure – cool air from upper atmosphere presses down towards the earths surface (usually means sunny and no rain) 2. There is low pressure - warm surface air moves into the upper atmosphere (if air is moist it forms clouds that bring rain) • Air from high-pressure areas will naturally flow into low-pressure areas which creates wind • The Indian Ocean is much cooler than the lands surface which helps generate Monsoons 27.2 Continued Mountains will effect were the storms will drop their moisture • Upwind slopes (against wind) will receive large amount of rain • Downwind slopes (with wind) receive less rain • Geographers call this the Orographic Effect 27.3 The Wet Months in Dhaka, Bangladesh • • • • • • 10 million people live in Dhaka In 1996 – about 3 million died from flooding July is a tough month Most of Bangladesh lies on the river delta 80 inches of rain a year (1 of the wettest) From November to April it gets very dry 27.3 Continued Life depends on the rains • 3 out of every 5 people farm • Too much rain causes everything to stop (can’t plant or harvest, vehicles can’t move, flooding happens) • Polluted drinking water is a major problem 27.4 The Dry Months of Jodhpur, India A city on the edge of a desert • Jodhpur sits on the Eastern edge of the Thar Desert in Northern India • Semiarid most of the year • Receives 14 inches of rain between June & September from the monsoons • 80% of people here farm • If rain is late or not enough farmers will not have a crop 1. This leads to disease and starvation 2. Some try to survive on Samas (wild grass) • To conserve water farmers have started to use drip irrigation (water dripped directly into crop roots) 27.5 Waiting for the Rains in Calcutta, India Wet Summers & Dry Winters • About 15 million live here (1/3 live in slums) • Monsoons from June to September can drop 50 inches of rain and bring 100 degree heat • The city slows, children wade through water to get to school • Old canals clog with garbage, standing water brings mosquitoes, they can spread disease • The city is working on repairing sewer systems and helping with flooding issues 27.6 Living in the Rain Shadow: Pune, India Located on the Deccan Plateau in Western India, totals 29 inches of rain a year while Mumbai (115 miles away) gets 70 inches A Year-Round Dry Climate • Western Ghats mountains lie between • Pune sits on the downwind side of the mountains • Live on less water, grow sugar beats and not sugar cane (Takes less water) 27.6 Continued • They have practiced Cloud Seeding (spreading chemical into clouds to bring rain) • These people live in the Rain Shadow