Weather & Climate Lab 1C - 1E Lab 1C: Location • Globes often mark parallels & meridians in 10° or 15° increments Longitude = MERIDIANS •Converge at the poles •Farthest apart at equator •Range from 0° to 180° Latitude = PARALLELS Range from 0° to 90°N and 90°S Lab 1C: Location Key Words: • Parallels – relate to latitude • Meridians – relate to longitude • Prime Meridian – GMT longitude • IDL (International Date Line) – 180 degrees longitude Lab 1C: Location • Written as Degrees Minutes Seconds ex: 43°52’44”N, 103°27’35”W • Always written as Latitude, Longitude Lab 1D: Time • Earth rotates from West to East • Hence, the sun rises in the east, and sets in the west • If time is newer in the west, and older in the east, then it must be later in the day in the eastern portion of the globe Lab 1D: Time 8:00 7:00 9:00 Note: physical features alter the rigidity of time zones 10:00 Lab 1D: Time • One day is 24 hours, this is the same amount of time it takes for the earth to complete one rotation • If the earth consists of 360°, and it takes 24 hours to rotate, how many degrees does one hour occupy? 15° • 360°/24 hours = 15° Lab 1D: Time Lab 1D: Time • There are 24 standard time zones – Marked by degrees of longitude – Based on central meridians spaced 15° of longitude apart • Moving east to west: – Time becomes earlier • Moving west to east: – Time becomes later Lab 1D: Time • Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) – Established in 1884 as world reference for standard time – Also known as Universal Time Coordinated (UTC) – Sometimes referred to as Zulu, which is represented as a 24:00 clock Lab 1D: Time • A difference in time can be calculated mathematically 2 Steps: 1.Find the difference in degrees, between the two time zones 2.Divide that number by the degrees the earth rotates an hour (15 degrees) Lab 1C: Time Tokyo: 135°E Rome: 15°E Difference = 120° 120°/15° = 8 Hours Tokyo is 8 hours later than Rome, because it is east of rome Tokyo: 135°E Rome: 15°E Rome 15°E 30° E 45° E 60° E 75° E 90°E REMEMBER: 15° of longitude = 1 hour East = time gets later (+) 105° E 120° E Tokyo 135°E Lab 1D: Time International Date Line – Generally follows the 180° meridian – Traveling from east to west = next day – Traveling from west to east = previous day Lab 1D: Time • Daylight-saving time: – Summer = longer days (DST) – Winter = shorter days (ST) • In U.S., not Hawaii or most of AZ • Countries near the equator do not observe day-light savings. • “Spring Ahead, Fall Back” Lab 1D: Time • Sunrise & Sunset Time Correction: – East of our location = earlier – West of our location = later • 1° Longitude = 4 Minutes • 60 Minutes (in an hour) / 15° (degrees rotated in an hour) = 4 Minutes Lab 1E: Isolines • Isolines: lines on a map that connect points of equal value • Often used to show varying levels or concentrations: • • • • Rainfall Temperature (Isotherms) Elevation Pressure (Isobars) Lab 1E: Isolines • Isolines never cross • Topographic Maps consist of contour lines showing elevation Lab 1E: Isolines • • • • Drawn at regular intervals Always closed lines Never cross each other Gradient represented by distance between lines: • Close together = rapid horizontal change • Far apart = gradual horizontal change • Values inside a closed isoline are either higher or lower than those outside the closed isoline. Lab 1E: Isolines Must label your isolines! 10° 15° Next Week: • Prepare for Pre Lab Quiz, Lab #2 given at the beginning of class • Hand in ALL of Lab #1, Sections 1A-1E