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Little Endian Guest
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Posted: Mon Apr 23, 2007 4:01 am Post subject: Weather differences between the two coasts |
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This could be deemed off-topic but I was wondering why it gets so cold
on the Atlantic side of the USA compared to the Pacific side in the
winters. Given the frigid waters of the Pacific compared to the warmer
Atlantic, it is surprising to me that Boston gets much colder than
Seattle even though both cities are at comparable latitudes. What
contributes to the cold weather on the Atlantic side? |
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Doug Palmer Guest
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Posted: Mon Apr 23, 2007 4:31 am Post subject: Re: Weather differences between the two coasts |
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Oversimplified, much of the weather in Seattle is influenced by the warmer
Japanese ocean currents coming up from the equator, While much of Bostons
weather is influenced by cold artic air coming down from Canada. Bostons
weather is actually moderated somewhat by the warm atlantic, of course take
warm damp air moving up the east coast from the tropics and mix that with
the cold air coming down from the artic and you get some humdinger storms.
| Quote: | This could be deemed off-topic but I was wondering why it gets so cold
on the Atlantic side of the USA compared to the Pacific side in the
winters. Given the frigid waters of the Pacific compared to the warmer
Atlantic, it is surprising to me that Boston gets much colder than
Seattle even though both cities are at comparable latitudes. What
contributes to the cold weather on the Atlantic side?
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Little Endian Guest
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Posted: Mon Apr 23, 2007 6:13 am Post subject: Re: Weather differences between the two coasts |
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| Quote: | What contributes to the cold weather on the Atlantic side?
Canada. )
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Yeah, but the same question applies to Vancouver and Toronto. |
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john smith Guest
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Posted: Mon Apr 23, 2007 6:13 am Post subject: Re: Weather differences between the two coasts |
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In article <1177282882.024945.271410 (AT) l77g2000hsb (DOT) googlegroups.com>,
Little Endian <girish.pai (AT) gmail (DOT) com> wrote:
| Quote: | What contributes to the cold weather on the Atlantic side?
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Canada. ) |
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Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe Guest
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Posted: Tue Apr 24, 2007 2:06 am Post subject: Re: Weather differences between the two coasts |
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"Little Endian" <girish.pai (AT) gmail (DOT) com> wrote in message
news:1177291841.576752.196560 (AT) q75g2000hsh (DOT) googlegroups.com...
| Quote: | What contributes to the cold weather on the Atlantic side?
Canada. )
Yeah, but the same question applies to Vancouver and Toronto.
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And the answer is "northern Canada".
Remember, weather moves from left to right across the US and Canada.
--
Geoff
The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com
remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail
When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate. |
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Ron Garret Guest
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Posted: Tue Apr 24, 2007 9:31 pm Post subject: Re: Weather differences between the two coasts |
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In article <462c09a2$0$1377$4c368faf (AT) roadrunner (DOT) com>,
john smith <johnsmith (AT) net (DOT) net> wrote:
| Quote: | In article <1177282882.024945.271410 (AT) l77g2000hsb (DOT) googlegroups.com>,
Little Endian <girish.pai (AT) gmail (DOT) com> wrote:
What contributes to the cold weather on the Atlantic side?
Canada. )
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That's actually not so far from the truth.
| Quote: | Given the frigid waters of the Pacific compared to the warmer
Atlantic..
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It's true that the Atlantic is warmer than the Pacific, but the
prevailing winds blow from west to east. So Boston gets Canada's
weather while Seattle gets ocean weather. Water has a much higher heat
capacity than land, so oceans tend to keep the temperature constant.
That's why Seattle -- and San Diego -- are both cooler than Boston in
the summers too.
rg |
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Highflyer Guest
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Posted: Thu Apr 26, 2007 6:13 am Post subject: Re: Weather differences between the two coasts |
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"Gary" <f7768 (AT) aol (DOT) com> wrote in message
news:1177338593.261468.93010 (AT) p77g2000hsh (DOT) googlegroups.com...
| Quote: | On Apr 22, 7:31 pm, "Doug Palmer" <shitm...@mindspring.com> wrote:
Oversimplified, much of the weather in Seattle is influenced by the
warmer
Japanese ocean currents coming up from the equator, While much of
Bostons
weather is influenced by cold artic air coming down from Canada. Bostons
weather is actually moderated somewhat by the warm atlantic, of course
take
warm damp air moving up the east coast from the tropics and mix that with
the cold air coming down from the artic and you get some humdinger
storms.
I believe the Japanese current actually comes down from the north
along the west coast of North America, and it's considered a cold-
water current. I suspect it still plays a role in moderating the
weather in Seattle and elsewhere on the left coast. On the east
coast, the gulf stream comes up from the equator and it's reasonably
warm, but I think the cold air from Canada is the more important
effect in explaining Boston's weather (the gulf stream is usually very
far offshore at that latitude, anyway.)
Gary
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The Japanese current comes out of the China Sea and is a WARM current. Like
the gulf stream in the atlantic it flows north and then east ending with a
southerly flow. The Japanese current flows past Japan, along the southern
side of the Aleutian chain and then turns down the coast along the Alaska
peninsula and down past Seattle and southward. It brings warm weather to
southern Alaska and the pacific northwest. It also brings lots of rain and
fog.
In the Atlantic the gulf stream flows out of the gulf of Mexico and flows
northeast along the coast and veers to the east when it meets the cold
Labrador current coming out of the straits between Labrador and Greenland.
It raises the winter temperatures if western Ireland high enough that you
can see palm trees growing in Connemara. It keeps Ireland, Britain, and
Brittany warm and wet in the winter.
Find a book about ocean currents and surface and deep currents. There is a
lot of water moving around as the world turns!
Highflyer
Highflight Aviation Services
Pinckneyville Airport ( PJY ) |
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