A humid climate often means an above average rainfall, and more water erosion to shape the hills into a more rounded shape.
the climate is humid tropical plain and most people live their because of the temperatures are more modern
tropical; hot, humid; more moderate in highlands
Since the time of the dinosaurs, the temperature has cooled, and the earth has become more humid.
The hotter and more humid a climate, the faster and more completely big rocks are broken into smaller rocks, then into pebbles, then into tiny particles that make up the loose stuff we call soil. If a climate is cool and dry, this "weathering" process proceeds very slowly.
Virginia has a humid, subtropical climate (a humid continental climate in the mountains) with hot summers and relatively mild winters, though outbreaks of cold and snow/ice do occur. These are less common on the coast, and more common in the mountains and to the north. Thunderstorms are a common occurrence in the spring and summer, though don't turn severe as frequently as they do in the US South and Midwest. The coast is somewhat prone to tropical cyclones, which more frequently bring flooding rains than any storm surge or widespread wind destruction. Snowfall averages only a few inches on the coast, to a few feet or more in the mountains. Average snowfall is about 18 inches around Washington.
Winters were cold and summers were mild
Mississippi
yes it is true because mild climate gives you a chance to kinda work more effectively, while humid climate gives you more of a hot and tiring work approach.
Most of Germany has a (humid) temperate climate, but the more easterly parts have a continental climate.
tropical
because it is more near the sun
Savanna is the grassland transition zone between a desert and a more humid region.
It is a hot one and more humid
No, guavas prefer a more humid, tropical climate.
There is a wide range of climates in the Northeast. Northern New England has warm, humid summers and snowy, cold, bitter winters. Below that has a Hot summer humid continental climate. They also have cold snowy winters. Boston, Pittsburgh and Hartford have this climate. Southeastern Pennsylvania and southwestern Connecticut have a humid subtropical climate with hot humid climates and a more mild winter.
Depending on where in Connecticut you are, and on your particular micro-climate, Connecticut ranges from a 5B to a 7A USDA Hardiness Zones.The southern coast is warmest, at 7A. The northwest and northeast hills are coldest as a zone 5B. The rest of the state is rated as a 6B.(See related links, below, for a map. It is a frames site, so you will probably still have to click on 'CT' to reach the map page.)
no its false it does not have the same climate zone