Relief & Climate Characteristics (SL IB Geography)

Revision Note

Jacque Cartwright

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Relief & Climate Characteristics of Cold & High-Altitude Environments

  • Around the world, cold environments vary
    • For instance, polar regions are considered to be dry (arid) but some areas can be hyper-arid  
    • At the upper latitudes, the sun does not rise or sink for several months of the year

Polar 

  • Climate
    • Harsh, covered in snow and ice
    • Long winters and short summers 
    • Snow storms and cold winds for most of the year
    • The Arctic's mean temperature range is -28 °C to 4 °C
    • Average annual precipitation of approx. 100mm
    • The Antarctic's mean temperature is -55 °C in some places
    • Coastal areas are milder, with an annual average of -10 °C
    • The annual average precipitation is 200 mm
  • Relief
    • The Arctic is a frozen ocean mostly surrounded by land
      • It has pack and drift ice
      • Rugged shores
      • Flat coastal plains
      • Rolling hills
      • Mountains surpassing 6 000 m above sea level
      • The Arctic has moderate relief
    • The Antarctic is an area of land surrounded by oceans
      • Covered in a thick ice sheet 
      • The Transantarctic mountain range divides the continent east and west, with peaks above 4 000 m
      • West Antarctica has the highest mountain (Mt Vinson) at 4892m above sea level
      • Antarctica has the highest average surface elevation of all the continents, at around 2000m above sea level
      • The highest elevation is over 4 000 m
      • Therefore, Antarctica has a rugged relief

High-mountain (non-tropical)

  • Climate
    • Cool climates with some snow coverage but not all year
    • Seasonal temperatures range from −10 °C in winter to 20 °C in the summer months
    • Precipitation in high mountains depends on aspect
      • Windward sides receive large amounts of precipitation, with snow in the winter months
      • Leeward sides are in the rain shadow and, therefore, drier and protected from strong winds
      • On average, temperatures decrease with elevation at roughly 10 °C per 1000 m, so high mountains will be much colder than lower-altitude environments
  • Relief
    • Some mountain environments may have a wide diurnal range
    • Some mountain areas are dry because they are in the rain shadow, while others are wet with high rates of rainfall
    • Mountains may appear as a single feature or in a range
    • They can be formed through folding, such as the Andes, or through volcanic eruptions (Mount Elbrus, Caucasus)
    • They usually have steep slopes, with scree at their bases, alternating between valleys, hills and peaks
    • They can be classified as rugged relief

Glacial

  • Climate
    • Characterised by permanently low temperatures, but may rise above 0 °C with seasonal temperature variations 
    • Cold climates in high latitudes and altitudes
    • Ice remains throughout the year
    • High precipitation but limited liquid precipitation provide inputs into the glacial system
    • Little seasonal temperature variation 
  • Relief
    • Can be covered in u-shaped valleys along with steep, eroded mountain peaks
    • Or deep valleys with sediment deposits
    • Soil exposure is less due to snow cover
    • If sea invades the deep valley, it becomes a fjord
    • Can be classified as rugged relief

Periglacial

  • Climate
    • Cool climates with some snow coverage but not all year
    • Seasonal temperatures range from −10 °C in winter to 20 °C in the summer months
    • Mean average temperature between -1 °C and -3 °C
    • Precipitation in alpine mountains depend on aspect
      • Windward sides receive large amounts of precipitation, with snow in winter months
      • Leeward sides are in the rain shadow and, therefore, drier and protected from strong winds
      • Mean annual precipitation less than 1 000 mm
  • Relief
    • Found mainly in the northern hemisphere
    • Lack permanent ice cover, but experience freezing temperatures most of the year
    • Have a layer of permafrost beneath the active soil layer
    • Can be classified as moderate relief with significant elevation changes and a mix of landforms

Relief & Climate Characteristics of Hot Arid Environments

Climate

  • Hot, arid environments share a number of climatic characteristics
  • Located in zones of high atmospheric pressure due to sinking, warm, dry air
  • Insolation is strong because of a lack of cloud cover and the angle of the sun
  • Temperatures are high with large diurnal ranges (up to a 30 °C difference) 
    • The diurnal range is less extreme (up to15°C) in semi-arid regions
    • The mean annual temperature of most arid margins is lower by approximately 10 and 20 °C
    • Distance from the coasts: land heats and cools faster inland, providing a greater range of temperature
    • Height above sea level (elevation): the higher the region, the cooler it will be
    • Albedo effects temperatures: salt-encrusted, dried-out lakes reflect insolation, making the area cooler
  • Strong desert winds and sandstorms are common
    • Changes in temperatures create steep pressure gradients that generate strong winds
    • Harmattan winds from the Sahara create powerful dust (loess) storms that blow over West Africa between Nov and April 
    • Convection winds are typical late afternoon and evening
  • Precipitation is usually small, infrequent but intense, resulting in flash flooding
    • The overhead sun (low latitude) provides intense convective activity that triggers thunderstorms
    • Arid regions receive 25–250 mm of precipitation per year
    • Semi-arid areas have seasonal rainfall between 250 and 500 mm per year
    • Areas closer to cool ocean currents have lower temperatures and produce sea fog

Relief

  • Deserts are considered active, mobile landscapes
  • Vegetation is sparse, such as grassland, with few trees 
    • However, irrigation schemes show that many hot deserts have potentially fertile soils
    • Allowing some areas to be permanently or seasonally inhabited by people
  • Surfaces are hard (baked by the Sun) or have exposed rock
    • Making infiltration rates poor and increasing surface runoff
  • Relief can be divided into 3 types:
    • Hamada: most of the sand has been removed, leaving behind a landscape of gravel, boulders and bare rock plateaus
    • Reg: hard, impermeable surfaces composed of rock fragments set in sand or clay
    • Erg: sandy deserts/sand seas, common only in about 30% of deserts.  Their distribution appears to be climate-linked (i.e. less than 150 mm of rain)

desert-landscape

Hamada desert Reg desert  Erg desert

 

  • Desert landscapes are diverse due to:
    • Geological factors (tectonics and rock type)
    • Climate: temperature, rainfall and wind
    • Weathering and mass movement processes
    • Time 

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Jacque Cartwright

Author: Jacque Cartwright

Expertise: Geography Content Creator

Jacque graduated from the Open University with a BSc in Environmental Science and Geography before doing her PGCE with the University of St David’s, Swansea. Teaching is her passion and has taught across a wide range of specifications – GCSE/IGCSE and IB but particularly loves teaching the A-level Geography. For the last 5 years Jacque has been teaching online for international schools, and she knows what is needed to pass those pesky geography exams.