Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - Which city is Hengzhou, Zhejiang?

Which city is Hengzhou, Zhejiang?

Quzhou is a prefecture-level city under the jurisdiction of Zhejiang Province and does not belong to other cities.

Quzhou is a prefecture-level city under the jurisdiction of Zhejiang Province. Located in the Yangtze River Delta, the west of Zhejiang Province, the upper reaches of Qiantang River, and the western end of Jin (Hua) Qu (Zhou) Basin. Its geographical coordinates are north latitude11801'-1920', and north latitude is 28 65438+. The city covers an area of 8844 square kilometers.

Quzhou is connected to Nanping in Fujian in the south, Shangrao and Jingdezhen in Jiangxi in the west, Huangshan in Anhui in the north and Jinhua, Lishui and Hangzhou in the province in the east. Known as the thoroughfare of four provinces, the first of five roads.

Quzhou is a national green financial reform and innovation pilot zone, a pilot project of Qianjiangyuan national park system, a national business environment evaluation pilot project, a national "multi-regulation integration" pilot project, a national global tourism demonstration zone creation pilot project, and the first batch of practice and innovation bases in China that "clear water and green mountains are priceless assets".

climate

Quzhou City belongs to the subtropical monsoon climate zone. Four distinct seasons throughout the year, long winter and summer, short spring and autumn, sufficient light and heat, abundant precipitation, moderate temperature and long frost-free period, with the characteristics of "short spring and autumn, long summer and winter, mild temperature, abundant sunshine and obvious drought and flood".

The winter wind is stronger than the summer monsoon all year round. The wind direction in urban areas and Changshan is east-northeast, that in Longyou and Jiangshan is northeast, and that in Hua Kai is north. There are various landforms in this area. At the turn of spring and summer, the complex terrain conditions help to stop the stagnation of the front and increase the chance of precipitation. In midsummer, it is difficult for typhoons to penetrate deep into the territory, with less impact and more static and hot weather.