Rotation of earth.
In the southern hemisphere, the southeast trade winds blow from the southeast towards the equator, bringing warm, moist air. These winds play a crucial role in the climate and weather patterns of the region, influencing factors such as rainfall distribution and ocean currents.
Trade winds are found in the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) which is one term used when talking about trade winds. Low level trade winds near the equator are also reffered to as easterlies. In the Northern Hemisphere, the trade winds blow from the northeast and are known as the Northeast Trade Winds; in the Southern Hemisphere, the winds blow from the southeast and are called the Southeast Trade Winds. So it depends what you are looking for here...
trade winds in the southern hemisphere blow from the southeast!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The trade winds (northeast or southeast depending on which hemisphere you're in) blow towards the Equator.
No. In the Northern Hemisphere, the trade winds blow Northeast and in the Southern Hemisphere they blow Southeast
The trade winds are the pattern of easterly surface winds found in the tropics near the equator. The trade winds blow predominantly from the northeast and from the southeast. The trade winds act as the steering flow for tropical storms that form over the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans that make landfall in North America, Southeast Asia, and India.
Predominantly Northwest to Southeast
Trade winds originate from the subtropical regions near the equator, where the Earth's rotation causes air to flow from east to west. These winds are responsible for steering many of the world's major weather systems and play a crucial role in global atmospheric circulation.
Northeast and southeast trade winds converge at the ITCZ. (Inter-tropical Convergence Zone)
Curving of winds and currents caused by Earth's rotation is called surface currents.
The northern trade winds blow from the northeast. The southern trades blow from the southeast.
The prevailing westerlies.