Be aware that Latin America includes Mexico, Central America, the Caribbean and South America. This means the whole region spans two hemispheres.
With that being said, the hemispheres don't affect the climate at all. It however, reverses the seasons for those countries located on the Southern Hemisphere, such as Brazil, Chile or Argentina. For example, when it is Summer in the northern hemisphere, the southern hemisphere is having its Winter season.
it absorbs it and the water in the deep outmatches it and makes it cooler still
it absorbs it and the water in the deep outmatches it and makes it cooler still
Coreolis affect
The warm climate and rich soil of the Southern Colonies were well suited for agriculture.
When its snowing its cold you cant do the olympics
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The coriolis effect makes ocean currents move in a curved path.
Currents don't affect the Coriolis Effect, the Coriolis Effect is the one who affects the currents. Currents in the Northern Hemisphere bend to the left and currents in the Southern Hemisphere bend to the right.
The climate.
There are three ways that land and water affect climate in South America. The first way is a rain shadow which mean mountains cause dry climate. Another way is El Nino. This means that warm currents bring rain. The last way is that high elevations have cold climate. As you can see, there are three ways that land and water affect climate in South America.
The Coriolis effect is a result of the Earth's rotation, causing moving objects to be deflected to the right in the Northern Hemisphere and to the left in the Southern Hemisphere. This difference in deflection influences weather patterns and ocean currents, leading to distinct rotational patterns in storm systems, such as cyclones, which spin clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere and counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere. The underlying physics remains the same, but the direction of deflection is what distinguishes the two hemispheres.
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