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Post by Steelernation on Nov 13, 2022 17:27:00 GMT -5
That could work too, I'm not dead set on specific numbers. But the problem with any system is you will always have places on either side of a boundary that will be put in different categories despite having similar climates. Yeah always an issue where borderline climates have more in common with the neighboring classification than many in their own but I still think classifications should have similar general features. Once winters start dropping below 0 c they get dramatically different with much more and longer cold and much more snow. 0 c boundary makes way more sense for a classification with cool but not particularly cold winters and occasional snow
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Post by greysrigging on Nov 13, 2022 23:36:25 GMT -5
Those locations are the epitome of a subtropical climate. No, the epitome of subtropicalitΓ© is the coastal lowland US South, in cities such as Houston, Nouvelle OrlΓ©ans, Charleston, and Savannah.
Spanish moss + live oak + sabal palmetto = subtropique maximale ^^I do like that pic looks very nice country.... But I think myself that that this pic of coastal NSW with the Jacaranda trees in bloom is the epitome of subtropicalitΓ©.... And this is the hinterland inland from Wollongong ( south of Sydney )
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Post by MET on Nov 14, 2022 7:58:43 GMT -5
Nope.
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