Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - Which city does Taihe County belong to?

Which city does Taihe County belong to?

Taihe County belongs to Fuyang City, Anhui Province, and was called Shang Lu, Xingqiu and Qiu Lin in ancient times.

Taihe county, alias Xiyang, is located in the northwest of Anhui Province. It has been awarded the titles of China's hometown of folk culture and art, China's advanced grain production county and China's green model county. Anhui Province, referred to as Anhui for short, is the first-class administrative region of China people, with Hefei as the capital and located in the east of China. It is about 450 kilometers wide from east to west and 570 kilometers long from north to south, with a total area of14.010,000 square kilometers.

Anhui province is composed of plains, hills and mountains, spanning three major water systems: Huaihe River, Yangtze River and Qiantang River. It is an important part of the Yangtze River Delta, which is at the strategic crossroads of national economic development and the junction of several major domestic economic sectors.

Climatic characteristics:

Taihe county is located in the eastern part of the Asian continent. According to the natural division of China, the climate is divided into east monsoon temperate zone and semi-humid zone, which is close to the tropical climate in North Asia and is essentially a buffer zone for the two climates. It is characterized by obvious monsoon climate, four distinct seasons, abundant sunshine, mild climate, moderate rainfall and long frost-free period.

However, due to the buffer zone of two climates, the weather is often changeable, and natural disasters such as low temperature, continuous rain, drought, waterlogging, hail, frost and strong wind often appear, which has adverse effects on agricultural production. Temperature: annual average 14.9℃. 65438+ 10 is the coldest in October, with an average of 0.7℃, and the hottest in July, with an average of 27.9℃, with an annual temperature difference of 27.2℃. The extreme maximum temperature of 1959 to 1985 is 40.8℃.