The polar regions are cold year-round, but they are their coldest August through May.
The polar region is cold because the energy of the sun arrives at an oblique angle.
This type of climate region is called a tundra climate.
The source region of a maritime polar air mass is typically a cold, moist maritime region near the poles, such as the North Atlantic or North Pacific Ocean. As the air mass moves away from this region, it can bring cool, damp weather conditions to areas it affects.
A high pressure system usually produces these conditions in winter. Continental polar (apex)
A high-latitude region that receives very little precipitation is called a polar desert. Antarctica and the Arctic are examples of regions that experience polar desert conditions, with extremely low levels of precipitation due to cold temperatures and their distance from sources of moisture.
Pay close attention to your question. A maritime (meaning oceanic) air mass has moisture, therefore it's not dry. Polar (meaning from the polar region) air mass is cold, therefore it is cold. Hence a maritime polar air mass would be moist and cold...how hard was that?
The polar regions are cold year-round, but they are their coldest August through May.The polar region is cold because the energy of the sun arrives at an oblique angle.
Cold and dry.
There are no tropical plans in either polar region: it's too cold for them to survive in those geographies.
the habitat of Polar Bear and Penguin is cold or a snowy region .they feed fish . they have fur on there body which keep them save from cold
The polar regions of the world are always cold during the year.
tundra
Cold wind in the region will lower the temperature of the place.
in the south polethe polar region is located in the northern part of the world or earth i think
Because "polar" refers to the Suns pole or axis, not to a region of cold.
The arctic is NOT "under the equator." It is at the north polar region. The Antarctic is at the south polar region; the average temp in the polar regions are much colder than at the equator.
Antarctica and the Arctic region are consistently cold due to their polar climates and icy environments. These areas experience extremely low temperatures and harsh winter conditions year-round.
Polar bears, like other animals in that region, have a kind of blubber under their fur to insulate them from the cold.