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Location: Near Tours, France about 47°10'N 0°25'E
2,825 posts, read 5,264,432 times
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Mankind is originary from the tropics. Tropical climate is the only one to which humans are naturally adapted.
Living everwhere esle need some kind of heating during the cold season. Humans are not made for cold, without clothes they are well around 25-30c. Below this needs clothes and beliw 20c need heating.
Mankind is originary from the tropics. Tropical climate is the only one to which humans are naturally adapted.
Living everwhere esle need some kind of heating during the cold season. Humans are not made for cold, without clothes they are well around 25-30c. Below this needs clothes and beliw 20c need heating.
First humans were evolved in Western Africa, which is in the tropics, but in the highlands, so humans' native climate is cool, not hot.
Probably tropical with A/C, but they'd both be uncomfortable.
I found Honolulu surprisingly not that hot in summer (high rise probably helps though), so tropical oceanic may be bearable.
So a small island right at the immediate coast is cooler at night than 10 miles inland. Okay
if he says so then yes, he obviously lives there, so he is the expert on his climate, really funny how often other forumers here disregard contributions from other posters on their climate through personal experience (unless if the claim is absurd, which this one isnt).
I have a fair understanding of Miami's Climate and urban heat effect so a completely concrete covered area, larger than the size of key Biscayne, with lots of vehicle and air traffic, and all that asphalt and lack of greenery contributing to hotter day temps than the "real" Miami neighborhoods, with landscaping and greenery, and terminal buildings and runways releasing heat at night cause for hotter day temps.
when i arrived in MIA the airport felt hotter than the neighborhoods i explored and visited (inland and coastal), so yes his/her statement makes sense.
if he says so then yes, he obviously lives there, so he is the expert on his climate, really funny how often other forumers here disregard contributions from other posters on their climate through personal experience (unless if the claim is absurd, which this one isnt).
I have a fair understanding of Miami's Climate and urban heat effect so a completely concrete covered area, larger than the size of key Biscayne, with lots of vehicle and air traffic, and all that asphalt and lack of greenery contributing to hotter day temps than the "real" Miami neighborhoods, with landscaping and greenery, and terminal buildings and runways releasing heat at night cause for hotter day temps.
when i arrived in MIA the airport felt hotter than the neighborhoods i explored and visited (inland and coastal), so yes his/her statement makes sense.
Yea it also depends on the time of year, during the spring coastal areas are slightly cooler than inland areas even at night. But during the fall they are warmer than inland areas.
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