Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - What's the climate like in Canberra and Cairo?

What's the climate like in Canberra and Cairo?

The climate of Canberra

Canberra is the capital of Australia, a young city. With a total area of 2,395 square kilometers, more than 50% of them are national parks or protected areas with a population of 300,000. The climate is mild and the four seasons are distinct. Canberra's urban design is very novel, and circular and radial roads organically separate administrative areas, commercial areas and residential areas. The water column of the Griffin Lake Fountain in the city center is as high as140m, which is very spectacular. The city is full of green trees and flowers in four seasons. Every September, Canberra holds a flower show, welcoming the arrival of spring with hundreds of thousands of flowers, and is known as the "Garden City of Oceania".

The city also has famous universities such as Australian National University and Canberra University, which attracts a large number of overseas students to study.

Cairo climate

Most parts of Egypt have a tropical desert climate. The climate is dry, and the temperature is as high as 40 degrees Celsius, sometimes even exceeding 50 degrees Celsius. There is often a strong "monsoon" from April to May every year. Dry and hot air originates from the largest Sahara desert in the world, and the sand and stones that come with the wind are extremely destructive. The annual temperature difference in tropical desert climate zone is between 12℃ and 16℃, with little change, while the daily temperature difference is very large. The highest temperature difference in Aswan area is 35 degrees Celsius; The temperature difference in the northern Sinai Peninsula is 30 degrees Celsius; The temperature difference between the mountainous areas adjacent to the Red Sea in Central and South China is 25 degrees Celsius.

There is little rain in Egypt, and the average annual precipitation is only 50-200mm, mostly in winter. Every April-10 is a dry period, and it hardly rains. Upper Egypt is dry and lacks rainfall, with an average annual rainfall of less than 30mm, while the annual rainfall in Sinai Peninsula near the Mediterranean Sea is 129mm.