What’s up weather? Topography is like the hills and valleys that help shape the sky, just like how your favorite slide makes you go faster or slower.
Imagine you're playing with a toy car on a ramp. If the ramp is flat, the car rolls slowly. But if it’s steep, the car zooms down fast! Mountains act like big ramps for the wind. When wind hits a mountain, it pushes up, kind of like when you blow on a paper to make it fly.
How mountains and valleys change weather
- Mountains can block or push air around. If the wind is blocked, it might bring rain or snow to one side but leave the other side dry.
- Valleys are like tunnels for the wind. Wind can get stuck in them, making it colder or warmer, just like how your bedroom feels different when you open a window.
Sometimes, the air goes up and cools down on top of a mountain, making clouds and rain. On the other side, the air drops down warm and dry, kind of like climbing to the top of a slide and then zooming back down!
Examples
- High elevations have thinner air, so it gets colder faster.
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See also
- How Does The Ocean Has Weather Too And It's Weird Work?
- How Does Sea Breeze | Land Breeze | Formation of Wind Work?
- How does topography affect the weather?
- How the Sun Affects Weather?
- How Does Understanding drought Work?