Climate-journals

 Climate, conditions of the atmosphere at a specific location over an extended period of time; it's the long-term summation of the atmospheric elements (and their variations) that, over short time periods, constitute weather. These elements are radiation , temperature, humidity, precipitation (type, frequency, and amount), air pressure , and wind (speed and direction). From the traditional Greek origins of the word (klíma, “an inclination or slope”e.g., of the Sun’s rays; a latitude zone of Earth; a clime) and from its earliest usage in English, climate has been understood to mean the atmospheric conditions that prevail during a given region or zone. within the older form, clime, it had been sometimes taken to incorporate all aspects of the environment, including the natural vegetation. the simplest modern definitions of climate regard it as constituting the entire experience of weather and atmospheric behaviour over variety of years during a given region. Climate isn't just the “average weather” (an obsolete, and always inadequate, definition). It should include not only the typical values of the climatic elements that prevail at different times but also their extreme ranges and variability and therefore the frequency of varied occurrences. even as one year differs from another, decades and centuries are found to differ from each other by a smaller, but sometimes significant, amount. Climate is therefore time-dependent, and climatic values or indexes shouldn't be quoted without specifying what years they ask .45. Geomorphology-open-access  

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