List of cities that should have their Koppen classification changed? (average, temperature)
Please register to participate in our discussions with 2 million other members - it's free and quick! Some forums can only be seen by registered members. After you create your account, you'll be able to customize options and access all our 15,000 new posts/day with fewer ads.
Even you try it's hard to divide climate zones in a way that would make them relatively equal in size.
Some climate zones are just going to be smaller than others (Mediterranean climates etc.). So, if you wanted to make, say San Francisco's, and nearby coastal California's, type of climate a new group separate from say Mediterranean Europe or Australia, and also separate from the maritime climates of the Pacific Northwest, it'd be even tinier on a map, compared to something like the boreal zone.
Even you try it's hard to divide climate zones in a way that would make them relatively equal in size.
Some climate zones are just going to be smaller than others (Mediterranean climates etc.). So, if you wanted to make, say San Francisco's, and nearby coastal California's, type of climate a new group separate from say Mediterranean Europe or Australia, and also separate from the maritime climates of the Pacific Northwest, it'd be even tinier on a map, compared to something like the boreal zone.
Coastal California, the Pacific Northwest, as well as coastal Alaska and the Canadian province of BC are all in the same climate group, a marine influenced type. Marine West coast is the proper name for this type of climate. The climate of coastal CA is not a unique phenomenon like you're making it out to be! The Pacific Northwest gets colder winters due to its higher latitude location.
Houston's average January temperature: 54*F
Hilo's record low: 53*F
Houston's average January high: 63*F
Hilo's average January high: 79*F
10 degrees?
I repeat again, Houston January average high is Hilo's average low. There are places in the tropics that are just as cool as Houston on average, nothing shocking.
I repeat again, Houston January average high is Hilo's average low. There are places in the tropics that are just as cool as Houston on average, nothing shocking.
So Hilo's winter is just as cool as Houston's winter?
I think Sydney ought to be considered subtropical rather than temperate.
Anchorage has only three months averaging 50+ F, hence subpolar.
NYC is subtropical according to Koppen, but I don't think it should be considered truly subtropical in view of the cold (albeit still fairly mild by North American standards) winters.
Houston is solidly subtropical (although at least one member here thinks it should be classified subarctic ) but definitely not tropical -- winters are very mild but not nearly warm enough to qualify as a tropical climate under Koppen.
Agree with you. Houston is solidly subtropical, definitely not tropical !
According to Koppen, tropical climate has to have an AVERAGE monthly temperatures above 18C (64.4F), and Houston is well below that, it's Jan high/low is only 17.2C(62.9F)/6.2C(43.2F), so the monthly AVERAGE should be around 10C(50F) which DISQUALIFIES Houston as tropical !
Please register to post and access all features of our very popular forum. It is free and quick. Over $68,000 in prizes has already been given out to active posters on our forum. Additional giveaways are planned.
Detailed information about all U.S. cities, counties, and zip codes on our site: City-data.com.