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Post by Deleted on Oct 4, 2017 23:03:37 GMT -5
Do you mean places like this?I wouldn't say it's too far-fetched to say that he means Atlantic Morocco Yeah, this. Lol
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Post by Ariete on Oct 7, 2017 12:12:06 GMT -5
Southern Ukraine, Moldova, Southern Michigan, Southernmost Ontario, coastal Ohio and Indiana... Windsor is nearly perfect.
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Post by sari on Oct 7, 2017 12:39:02 GMT -5
Southern Ukraine, Moldova, Southern Michigan, Southernmost Ontario, coastal Ohio and Indiana... Windsor is nearly perfect. My neighbor is from Windsor.
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Post by Ariete on Oct 7, 2017 12:54:48 GMT -5
My neighbor is from Windsor. The place looks boring as hell. Uninspiring.
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Post by sari on Oct 7, 2017 12:58:59 GMT -5
My neighbor is from Windsor. The place looks boring as hell. Uninspiring. According to him the central part is almost as dangerous as Detroit across the border and the outer areas are very safe but very empty of anything interesting. Oh, and there are a lot of casinos.
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Post by ilmc90 on Oct 9, 2017 14:42:29 GMT -5
Pacific Northwest (Oregon and Washington), British Columbia, and Alaska
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Post by Cadeau on Oct 19, 2017 20:06:41 GMT -5
-Southern England -Northern/Western/Central France -Pacific Northwest(Southwestern corner of British Columbia, Western Washington, Northwestern Oregon along I-5 Corridor)
Broader definition -Ireland -Northern England/The Midlands -Netherlands -Belgium -Germany -Switzerland -Denmark -Southern Sweden -Southern Norway -Northwestern Spain -Coastal Central/Southern California -Coastal Victoria region of Australia(Melbourne) -Tasmania region of Australia(leeward climates like Hobart) -North Island of New Zealand
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Post by Kaleetan on Oct 20, 2017 20:23:14 GMT -5
*Hong Kong
*Chongqing
*Orlando
*New Orleans
*Manila
*Okinawa
*Saigon
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Post by aabc123 on Oct 27, 2017 17:06:15 GMT -5
East-African highlands of course. Tropical heat is moderated by altitude there and that is the most comfortable. All the humankind is from there. Interestingly- there has been almost no any adaption during those so many tens of yearthousands when humankind has lived in colder areas as well. Almost of all humans love, their bodies love (although some people are trying to insist themselves that -10c is something good) temperatures around 75C-85F/24C-29C, no matter are they from Umea, Sweden or from N'Djamena, Chad.
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Post by tij on Jul 25, 2019 22:23:35 GMT -5
For myself:
Appalachian Mountains, west virginia! Oregon and Northern California Southern France Northern and Highland Spain/Italy/Portugal SE Europe, including Turkey has a lot of good stuff as well
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Post by nei on Jul 25, 2019 22:30:27 GMT -5
Old man lommaren remembers when you say it San Rafael really is a nice one, perhaps not an A+ but surely in the A- or B+ range for me! Those summers would be tremendous in that the nights would be very calm, but I'd be a bit unhappy with the crazy rainfall in winter even if it kept the place green. Possibly it would shield from wildfires in the summer though because of more moisture in the soil, right? Besides, what does Flagstaff lack that Gap has? see: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tubbs_Firenope, not a good shield. More rain = more vegetation to burn in a long, dry season
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Post by Hiromant on Jul 26, 2019 1:20:19 GMT -5
Interestingly- there has been almost no any adaption during those so many tens of yearthousands when humankind has lived in colder areas as well. Almost of all humans love, their bodies love (although some people are trying to insist themselves that -10c is something good) temperatures around 75C-85F/24C-29C, no matter are they from Umea, Sweden or from N'Djamena, Chad. There is plenty of adaptation to cold, even among Estonians. I recently read an article that the average Estonian starts sweating and feeling too hot at about 27Β°C while people from tropical climates go all the way up to 35Β°C. For me personally it's around 25Β°C and among Inuits it's as low as 20Β°C. There are also genetic adaptations like borealized eye folds, thicker cheeks, bigger noses, etc.
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Post by Speagles84 on Jul 26, 2019 5:57:31 GMT -5
The borderline between Dfb and Dfc climates. I like cold winters and lots of snow, a nice chilly shoulder season in between but also a nice mild to warn summer for 2 to 3 months. Precip can't be too heavy or light. Examples southern Alaska, eastern Canada, northern Scandanavia
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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2019 0:49:36 GMT -5
Only counting sizeable areas, so not very isolated locations like Solan.
Eastern Argentina near Buenos Aires + Uruguay Central-Southern Italy Mediterranean coast of France Eastern Adriatic/Ionian Sea coast south of 44N NE Aegean Sea coast Southern Caspian Sea coast NSW/VIC below 500m, somewhat inland but not in the desert
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Post by knot on Jul 27, 2019 1:24:27 GMT -5
I. Nevada County, California, Western US
II. Idaho, Western US
III. Nebraska, Western US (albeit winters are a little dry, but luckily still snowy)
IV. Southernmost reaches of Montana, Western US (Central and Northern reaches too cold)
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Post by Steelernation on Jul 27, 2019 1:26:10 GMT -5
β’High plains β’south central Montana,
β’isolated pockets of Central Asia, the Balkans and turkey.
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Post by aabc123 on Jul 27, 2019 2:15:00 GMT -5
Interestingly- there has been almost no any adaption during those so many tens of yearthousands when humankind has lived in colder areas as well. Almost of all humans love, their bodies love (although some people are trying to insist themselves that -10c is something good) temperatures around 75C-85F/24C-29C, no matter are they from Umea, Sweden or from N'Djamena, Chad. There is plenty of adaptation to cold, even among Estonians. I recently read an article that the average Estonian starts sweating and feeling too hot at about 27Β°C while people from tropical climates go all the way up to 35Β°C. For me personally it's around 25Β°C, a full 10Β°C lower. There are also genetic adaptations like borealized eye folds, thicker cheeks, bigger noses, etc. Adaptation? Interestingly, I've noticed that people still wear different clothes in the winter than in the summer ... And the question of nose size is purely a matter of genetics. Some Africans have big noses and some in turn have small ones. The largest noses in Europe, to my knowledge, are in the Mediterranean countries, Italy and Greece, which are not cold.
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Post by knot on Jul 27, 2019 2:19:37 GMT -5
Adaptation? Interestingly, I've noticed that people still wear different clothes in the winter than in the summer ... And the question of nose size is purely a matter of genetics. Some Africans have big noses and some in turn have small ones. The largest noses in Europe, to my knowledge, are in the Mediterranean countries, Italy and Greece, which are not cold.Sorrowfully wrong; Northern Europeans, of whom are direct descendants of Neanderthals, yield the greatest nasal height of any European raceβonly the Mongolians yield a greater nasal height, and Mongolia-Siberia is a tremendously cold region.
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Post by aabc123 on Jul 27, 2019 2:28:59 GMT -5
Adaptation? Interestingly, I've noticed that people still wear different clothes in the winter than in the summer ... And the question of nose size is purely a matter of genetics. Some Africans have big noses and some in turn have small ones. The largest noses in Europe, to my knowledge, are in the Mediterranean countries, Italy and Greece, which are not cold.Sorrowfully wrong; Northern Europeans, of whom are direct descendants of Neanderthals, yield the greatest nasal height of any European raceβonly the Mongolians yield a greater nasal height, and Mongolia-Siberia is a tremendously cold region. By nose size, I mean the length of the nose. In the Mediterranean, but also in the Caucasus, in Turkey people have long and big noses! There is no doubt about that. Looks like you haven't seen enough people. Is that guy a northern or southern European?
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Post by knot on Jul 27, 2019 2:52:39 GMT -5
aabc123 Nasal prominence (horizontal length) has absolutely nothing to do with climate adaptation; only the nasal height (vertical length, spanning from philtrum to nasion), and nasal breadth matter in regards to climate adaptation.
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