|
Post by ππΏMΓΆrΓΆnππΏ on Mar 4, 2019 1:28:30 GMT -5
Well I hope this Cold Fucken Desert lives up to its name... Cold Fucken Desert is located at 69N at 457m/1500' amsl, 160km/100 miles east of a towering mountain range that runs north/south (like the Rockies) with peaks reaching heights 7600m/25,000' amsl. This mountain range is likewise situated to the east of a large plateau, which has an average elevation of 6100m/20,000' amsl. For the poor scientists located in Cold Fucken desert, this geography prevents most precipitation from falling and produces very strong Chinook winds, roughly twice per month. Inuvik was my inspiration for this one. Anyway, Cold Fucken Desert gets a D- from me due to those lethal record lows.
|
|
|
Post by knot on Mar 4, 2019 1:31:02 GMT -5
Cβ; fun variability in summer, but nasty winters and terribly dry. Still better than Shitattle, however.
|
|
|
Post by Beercules on Mar 4, 2019 1:31:53 GMT -5
F
trash
|
|
|
Post by ππΏMΓΆrΓΆnππΏ on Mar 4, 2019 1:32:15 GMT -5
Shit, I just realized the winter sunshine hours are way too high for somewhere located at 69N. Ah well.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Mar 4, 2019 1:45:30 GMT -5
F for cold weather year-round. I don't consider this a desert though because evapotranspiration is too low.
|
|
|
Post by Steelernation on Mar 4, 2019 8:07:00 GMT -5
F.
|
|
|
Post by Crunch41 on Mar 5, 2019 13:59:31 GMT -5
E, terrible. Too wet to get an F With frost every night and high wind it is probably barren rocks or sand since no plants can grow. It would keep some snow around, depending on how often it gets above freezing between October and April. The mild days in summer would probably melt the previous year's snow, especially the rare warm or hot weather. If there was somehow a large lake, the lake might stay frozen all year since average temperature in the warmest month is only +1C.
|
|