In
climatology, the term
mesothermal is used to refer to certain forms of
climate found typically in the
Earth's
Temperate Zones. It
has a moderate amount of heat, with winters not cold enough to
sustain snow cover. Summers are warm within oceanic climate
regimes, and hot within continental climate regimes.
Origin of term
The term is derived from two
Greek
words meaning "having a moderate amount of heat." This can be
misinterpreted, however, since the term is actually intended to
describe only the
temperature conditions
that prevail during the winter months, rather than those for the
year as a whole.
Definition
Under the broadest definition, all places with an average
temperature in their coldest month that is colder than 18°C, but
warmer than −3°C, are said to have a mesothermal climate. In some
climate classification schemes, however, this is divided into two
segments, with a coldest-month average of 6°C being the line of
demarcation between them; then only those locations with a
coldest-month temperature of between −3°C and 6°C are reckoned as
mesothermal, the label "
subtropical" being applied to
areas where the average temperature in the coldest month ranges
from 6°C to 18°C.
Observing the narrower definition articulated above, the
mesothermal locations are those where the winters are too cold to
allow year-round
photosynthesis, but
not cold enough to support a fixed period of continuous
snow cover every year.
Range
In the
USA, the boundary line between mesothermal and microthermal ranges
is between Juneau
and Sitka
at the
Pacific Ocean. It goes sharply south to about 38N latitude
in the Rockies, and back up to around 43N latitude on the east
coast. The border with the megathermal zone passes through Southern
Florida.
Summer
Summers in these places may be hot (that is to say, having an
average temperature in their warmest month of 22°C or above) or
merely warm (with the warmest month averaging between 10°C and
22°C).
The
hot-summer, or continental, mesothermal climate is encountered
exclusively in the Northern Hemisphere
, in the landmass interiors of Asia and North America and
along their east coasts, while the most frequently seen example of
a warm-summer mesothermal climate is the oceanic climates found along the west coasts
of all of the world's continents, roughly equidistant between the
geographical tropical and polar zones.
List of mesothermal cities and their summer temperatures:
Hong Kong
-hot summer
Milan
-hot
summer
New York City
-hot summer
Tokyo
-hot
summer
London
-warm
summer
Mexico
City
-warm summer
Vancouver
-warm summer
Moisture
In addition to being subdivisible by summer temperature,
mesothermal climates can also be subclassified on the basis of
precipitation — into
humid,
semiarid and
arid subtypes.
See also
References
Applied Climatology, John Griffiths (for use of 6°C in the
coldest month as poleward limit of subtropical climates)
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