Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - What's the climate like in Darwin?

What's the climate like in Darwin?

Darwin has a savanna climate, and there are only two seasons throughout the year: 1 1 month is summer, and May to1month is winter. The weather here is warm all year round and rainy in summer. It is dry in winter. The winter weather in Darwin is cool and warm during the day and dry and cold at night.

Tropical grassland climate, also known as tropical dry and wet season climate, savanna climate, tropical savanna climate and tropical sparse grassland climate, is generally distributed between latitude 10 and the Tropic of Cancer, with most parts of Central Africa and South America and northern and eastern Brazil and Australia as typical examples. This kind of distribution area is located in the alternating control area of equatorial low pressure area and trade wind area. The annual temperature is high, and the annual average temperature is about 25℃, which can be divided into dry season and rainy season. During the control period of equatorial low pressure zone, equatorial air mass prevailed and precipitation was concentrated; During the trade wind control period, it is controlled by the tropical continental air mass, with little rain. The annual precipitation is generally 700- 1000 mm, and the dry season is obviously longer. The natural landscape is savanna.

The high temperature throughout the year is divided into obvious dry and wet seasons. The annual rainfall is 700 ~1000 mm, mostly in rainy season. The temperature in dry season is higher than that in tropical rain forest area, and the average daily temperature is between 24 ~ 30℃. Generally, the continental depression moves northward from May to 65438+10 every year. At this time, the southwest monsoon blowing from the Gulf of Guinea (also known as Guinea monsoon) prevailed in the tropical grassland in the northern hemisphere, bringing abundant precipitation and forming the rainy season. 1 1 By April of the following year, the continental low pressure moved southward, and the trade winds (Hamadan winds) with high pressure belts returning northward prevailed in the tropical grasslands in the northern hemisphere, which were very dry and formed a dry season. The dry and wet seasons of grassland in the hot grass belt in the southern hemisphere are just the opposite to those in the northern hemisphere.