Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Türkiye temperatures throughout the year

Türkiye temperatures throughout the year

Türkiye’s climate types vary greatly. The southeast is drier and the central Anatolian Plateau is cooler. Generally speaking, Turkey has long summers with high temperatures and little rainfall; winters are cold, with cold currents bringing snowfall and cold rain. There is plenty of rainwater for orchards, wheat fields and reservoirs, and plenty of sunshine for vineyards and beachgoers. The climate diversity explains Türkiye's extremely rich crop varieties.

The coastal areas of Turkey have a subtropical Mediterranean climate, while the inland plateau is relatively arid, transitioning to savannah and desert-type climates. The temperature difference is large. The average temperature in January on the inland plateau is below 0 degrees Celsius, and the annual average temperature is 16 to 22 degrees Celsius. Annual rainfall averages 200 to 400 mm. The average temperature in the canyon area in January is as high as 7 to 9 degrees Celsius; in July, the average temperature is between 25 and 30 degrees Celsius. The annual rainfall is 600 to 800 mm. Annual rainfall in coastal areas ranges from 500 to 700 mm. Extended information

The Turkish Republic is a country spanning Europe and Asia. Its territory includes the Asia Minor Peninsula (Anatolian Peninsula) in Western Asia and the Eastern Thrace region of the Balkan Peninsula in southern Europe. . It is bounded by the Black Sea to the north, the Mediterranean Sea to the south, Syria and Iraq to the southeast, the Aegean Sea to the west, Greece and Bulgaria, and Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Iran to the east.

Between the Anatolian Peninsula and Eastern Thrace is the Turkish Strait consisting of the Bosporus, the Sea of ??Marmara and the Dardanelles. The only waterway in the Black Sea and the Mediterranean Sea.

The coastline is 7,200 kilometers long and the land border is 2,648 kilometers long. Türkiye's geographical location and geopolitical strategic significance are extremely important, and it is the crossroads connecting Europe and Asia.

Turkey’s terrain is complex, ranging from coastal plains to mountainous pastures, from cedar forests to rolling steppes. This is one of the regions with the richest plant resources in the world.

Baidu Encyclopedia-Türkiye