What is the relationship between surface temperatures in northern latitude countries (such as Canada and Iceland), Norway and Russia, and those of northern Africa (including Algeria and Egypt), Libya, Morocco and Sudan?
Answer 1:
1) Northern latitudes experience higher summer temperatures, when the net radiation is lower.
2) North Africa experiences lower temperatures in the summer, because net radiation at northern latitudes is higher during the winter months.
3. Northern latitudes have lower temperatures all year.
4) Northern latitudes experience the coldest temperatures during winter months.
Given that water freezes (or melts) at 0°C, find which nations or landmasses have an annual mean temperature close to 0°C using the map.
Answer 2
1) Canada and Norway
2) United States of America and Great Britain
3. The Arctic and Antarctic
4) The Arctic and Antarctic
When the relative humidity is 50% on a warm day (86°F or 30°C), the heat index is:
Answer 3:
1) 87F s2) 90F s3) 31C
4) 33F
Three unfavorable effects of heat islands.
Answer 4:
1) Increased energy consumption, higher greenhouse gas emissions and improved water quality
2) Poorer human health and reduced energy consumption, as well as deteriorating water quality.
3) Reduction of greenhouse gas emissions and increased energy usage, as well as deterioration in human health
4) Increased emissions of greenhouse gases, pollution and energy consumption
Is this the United States’ county name? You may have to zoom in to see location names.
Questions 5 and 6: Lasalle
2) Bureau
2) Putnam
4) Marshall
Does the temperature anomaly change?
Option 6
1. The temperature anomaly has risen
2) There is more cold in the anomaly
(3) There are no anomalies; temperature is constant.
4) Unable to discern
Which European city is it called?
Answer 7:
1) Ludres 2. Frouard
Nancy
4)Toul
Does the temperature anomaly change?
Answer 8:
1) The anomaly tends to be warmer in general (stronger trend).
2) The trend is colder and more unusual.
(3) There is no temperature anomaly; everything is constant.
4) Unable to discern