|
Post by Babu on May 30, 2020 15:12:01 GMT -5
Inukjuak merely because of the fact that the winters are extremely cold as well. Had the winters been oceanic, it wouldn't have been weird. San francisco is very similar to the southwestern coast of Africa and South America Only talking about summer for this Oh I know. I just meant that it's normal for summers to be cool relative to their latitude if their winters are mild, the fact that Inukjuak has so cold summers despite being so continental is the most anomalous part. There are lots of places at that latitude with cooler summers, but those tend to be oceanic places with pretty mild winters.
|
|
|
Post by Hlidskjalf on May 30, 2020 15:39:28 GMT -5
Inukjak is pretty bad. The exact same latitude as Kristiansand, Norway's answer to copa cabana beach. But the summer in San Fransisco is horrendously awful for being that close to the equator. Much colder July than here, but with sun burn.
|
|
|
Post by jetshnl on Mar 9, 2022 0:59:26 GMT -5
Inukjuak for sure.
|
|
|
Post by CRISPR on Feb 25, 2024 2:11:20 GMT -5
It’s only like 5 f cooler than other coastal places at similar latitudes. And a few miles inland it’s exactly what you’d expect. Like which places? San Francisco in July averages 60F and Lisbon in July averages 74F. Auckland which is a very oceanic climate averages 66F. Concepción, Chile is at 36º50'S (closer to the equator, and has a January average (warmest month) of 17.1ºC). San Francisco has a July average of 15.7ºC, lower than a 5ºF difference. Winter is a whole different story: San Francisco is slightly warmer than average in winter; while Inukjuak is a frozen arctic hellhole.
|
|