Question:
What is the climate like in the Alps?
Dylan
2008-09-15 05:07:52 UTC
I want to know the climate in the Alps like 2000 m above sea level or something not in Italy, France etc.
Five answers:
Art Angelo
2008-09-15 05:13:46 UTC
----Climate of the Alps----



The climate of the Alps is the climate, or average weather conditions over a long time, of the central Alpine region of Europe. As air rises from sea level to the upper regions of the atmosphere the temperature decreases. The effect of mountain topography on prevailing winds is to force warm air from the lower region into an upper zone where it expands in volume at the cost of a proportionate loss of heat, often accompanied by the precipitation of moisture in the form of snow or rain.



The position of the Alps in the central European continent profoundly affects the climate of all the surrounding regions. The accumulation of vast masses of snow, which have gradually been converted into permanent glaciers, maintains a gradation of very different climates within the narrow space that intervenes between the foot of the mountains and their upper ridges; it cools breezes that waft to the plains on either side, but its most important function is to regulate the water supply of the large region which is traversed by the streams of the Alps. Nearly all the moisture that is precipitated during fall, winter, and spring is stored in the form of snow and gradually diffused.



a.Subalpine Alps



The Subalpine is the region which mainly determines the manner of life of the population of the Alps.



Roughly one quarter of the land lying between the summits of the Alps is available for cultivation. Of this low country, about one half may be vineyards and grain fields, while the remainder produces forage and grass. Of the high country, about half is utterly barren, consisting of snow fields, glaciers, bare rock, lakes and stream beds. The other half is divided between forest and pasture, and the product of this half largely supports the relatively large population. For a quarter of the year the flocks and herds are fed on the upper pastures, but the true limit of the wealth of a district is the number of animals that can be supported during the long winter, and while one part of the population is engaged in tending the beasts and in making cheese and butter, the remainder is busy cutting hay and storing up winter food for the cattle.



The larger villages are mostly in the mountain region, but in many parts of the Alps the villages stand in the subalpine region at elevations varying from 1200 m to 1700–1800 m (4000–6000 ft). The most characteristic feature of this region is the prevalence of coniferous trees that, where they have not been removed, form vast forests that cover a large part of the surface. These play a most important part in the natural economy of the country. They retain the soil by their roots, protect the valleys from destructive avalanches and mitigate the destructive effects of heavy rains. In valleys where they have been cut away, waters pour down the slopes unchecked; every tiny rivulet becomes a raging torrent that carries off the grassy slopes and devastates the floor of the valley, covering the soil with gravel and debris.



In the conifer forests of the Alps the prevailing species are the Norway Spruce and the Silver Fir; on siliceous soil the European Larch flourishes. The Scots Pine is chiefly found at a lower level and rarely forms forests. The Swiss Pine is found scattered at intervals throughout the Alps but is not common. The Mountain Pine is common at higher altitudes, often forming a distinct zone of Krummholz above the level of its congeners on the higher mountains. In the Northern Alps the pine forests rarely surpass 1800 m (6000 ft) elevation, but on the south side they commonly attain 2100 m (6900 ft), while European Larch, Swiss Pine and Mountain Pine often extend above that elevation.



b.Alpine Region of the Alps



The alpine region of the Alps refers to the region in the Alps between the uppermost limit of trees (the tree line) up to the permanent snow. This alpine region contains the full beauty and variety of characteristic vegetation of the Alps.



The region contains many shrubs:



* Three species of rhododendron have masses of red or pink flowers;

* The common junipers grow at elevations above the rhododendrons.

* Three species of bilberry are associated with the junipers.

* Several dwarf willows grow near the snow line.



c.Glacial Region of the Alps



On the higher parts of lofty mountains in the Alps more snow falls in each year than melts. A portion of this is carried away by the wind before it is consolidated, but a large portion accumulates in hollows and depressions of the surface and is gradually converted into glacier ice which descends by slowly flowing into the deeper valleys where it help swell perennial streams.



Mountain snow does not lie in beds of uniform thickness and some parts are more exposed to the sun and warm air than others. Beds of snow commonly alternate with exposed slopes covered with brilliant vegetation without an obvious boundary of perpetual snow. A seemingly clear boundary seems vi
2008-09-15 05:15:23 UTC
It is an H climate so it is unpredictable at best. Overall cold, but heat can strike in the deep summer (august mainly). It is a continental climate so thus the climate is not stabilized by the ocean (since there is none around).



It may be hot in the summer (generally the higher you go up, the relatively cooler it will be), but always cold in the winter. Expect heavy and sudden snow storms in the winter.
loper
2016-10-24 19:52:39 UTC
in many circumstances chilly! very last three hundred and sixty 5 days we went to Austria in June, somewhat city observed as Gerlos it became honestly pleasing, there became no ski-ing available, because it became round 30 degrees 90F in the course of the day, yet one evening it did snow on the the mountains, this became lengthy gone by ability of the morning.
2008-09-15 05:23:33 UTC
It`s...BRRRRR!!!!...VERY cold bud,..better take your sweater & heavy coat when going up there, ..and learn to YOOOODEL!!!...before your trip..ha-ha-ha...
2008-09-15 05:11:23 UTC
um.. look it up! LoL!!!


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