The amount of heat received from the sun at a place on the surface of the Earth depends upon its latitude or its distance from the Equator. There is a gradual fall in temperature as we move away from the Equator towards the poles. See- the following figure, We can notice that the rays of the sun are falling directly or vertically on the Equator. Thus they spread over a small area. Near the Poles, the rays of the sun are slanting and spread over a large area. This makes the area near the Equator hot and the area near the Poles cold. On the basis of heat received, we can divide the Earth into three zones. 23'/2°S
by: vontamayosa
The amount of heat received from the sun at a place on the surface of the Earth depends upon its latitude or its distance from the Equator. There is a gradual fall in temperature as we move away from the Equator towards the poles. See- the following figure, We can notice that the rays of the sun are falling directly or vertically on the Equator. Thus they spread over a small area. Near the Poles, the rays of the sun are slanting and spread over a large area. This makes the area near the Equator hot and the area near the Poles cold. On the basis of heat received, we can divide the Earth into three zones. 23'/2°S
Read more: Why_do_regions_that_receive_slanting_rays_of_the_sun_have_colder_climate
in siberia and Yukon
Determining climate is based on a lot of things, but the most important is latitude. As you increase in latitude, the colder the climate typically gets. For example, the equator (lowest latitude) is hot, while the upper regions of Earth are colder.
the higher the elevation, the colder the climate.
The higher the elevation is the colder the climate
The altitude affects the climate in the sense that the higher the altitude the colder and harsher the climate. For instance, on top of a mountain there are severe wind chills and extremely low temperatures. Latitude affecting the climate is dependent on the equator. The closer the latitude is to 0 degrees (the equator) the hotter the temperature and the more humidity in the atmosphere.LATITUDE the hottest ares of the earth are located close to the equator the coldest to the poles. this is due to the shape of the earth. the places closest to the equator receive the most direct rays of the sun. regions farther from the equator receive the rays that hit the earths surface on a slant, so the sun's energy is spread over ,and has to heat, a larger area of the earth
Most of Central America has a temperate to tropical climate, although it can be colder in the mountain regions.
Palm Trees...they have to be in warm climate
Tropical regions are cooler , polar regions are colder
it is colder year round
in siberia and Yukon
All regions of the world that are near the equator get the most amount of sun during the day, but probably more colder during the night.
it does get colder
I would asume you are talking about antarctica, there are 4 different regions there. The first region is cold, the second is cold, the third is cold and the forth is even colder then the other three. hope it helped :)
because of the political climate, the social climate was colder.
Determining climate is based on a lot of things, but the most important is latitude. As you increase in latitude, the colder the climate typically gets. For example, the equator (lowest latitude) is hot, while the upper regions of Earth are colder.
Colder
NYC have the coldest climate