The amount of sunlight hitting the earth.
C. Nitrogen
Altitude: the higher you are, the cooler the air is, at least until entering the tropopause Latitude: the closer you are to the poles, the cooler the climate tends to be. Oceans: the closer to being downwind from an ocean or other large body of water, the closer the air is the temperature of the water surface. Further away, the air is more the temperature of the land which varies in temperature greatly.
Shade from surrounding trees has the least effect on lake water temperature.
geographic position. if you have, theoretically, multiples the same rock and place them all across the earth (beaches, deserts, riverbeds, snow-capped mountains) they are going to weather in different ways and at different rates
Thick cloud cover can act as a blanket, trapping heat and causing the surface temperature to increase. Conversely, it can also reflect sunlight back into space, leading to a cooling effect on the surface temperature. The net effect depends on factors such as cloud altitude, composition, and thickness.
geographic position
Geographic position affects weather in an area by influencing factors like temperature, precipitation, and wind patterns. For example, proximity to bodies of water can moderate temperatures, while mountains can cause rainfall on one side and a rain shadow effect on the other. Additionally, latitude determines the amount of sunlight a region receives, impacting temperature and seasons.
A position fix
C. Nitrogen
effect of temperature
Zombies
Oil
Geographic position?
credit by justin newman
The weatherAdded: And their geographic location on the globe.
C. Latitude. The closer you are to the equator the warmer the temperature. The farther you move to either poles the colder it gets.
This depends on the geographic coordinates and the altitude of the location.