In ancient Rome the weather was usually sunny and had an even amount of rain in the winter, sometimes with fogginess.
Sometimes the gods sent violence to them, with storms, large waves, sometimes famine.
Volcanic eruptions were very rare until Pompeii was covered by lava and magma.
Almost the same. The climate doesn't change that slow
Mediterranean.
Mediterranean.
The climate in ancient Rome was the same as the present day climate in Rome. Basically warm and sunny with rain in winter sometimes punctuated with a rare snowstorm. It is called a Mediterranean climate.
It was hot in the summer, cold and rainy in winter with the occasional fog and storm at sea.
is Rome Italy a maritime or continental climate
Alaska is too big to have a "general" climate. It varies from moderate in the south and along the inside passage to arctic in the extreme north.
Warm in the summer and rainy/foggy in winter.
Rome is in the Mediterranean. Therefore, it has a Mediterranean climate: hot and dry summers and mild winters.
Sometimes it would rain, in the summer it would be light and hot/warm.
It was rainy and warm. The climate of ancient Rome was mostly the same as present day Rome. It was hot in the summer, and winter was pleasant. It was usually a moderate amount of rainfall.
15.7 C