Air Masses
Fronts
Weather Maps
Symbols
Winds
100
The two characteristics of air masses.
What are temperature and moisture?
100

Where two different large air masses meet and usually bring changes in the weather.

What are fronts?

100
Marked on weather maps as a blue line with triangles on it.
What is a cold front?
100
The capital letter H stands for this on a weather map.
What is a high pressure center?
100
The name given to a scientist that studies weather.
What is a meteorologist?
200
An air mass that is dry and forms over land.
What is a continental air mass?
200
A type of front made of cold, dense air. Rain, snow, thurnderstorms and sometimes tornadoes are caused by this front. Usually, the precipitation does not last very long.
What is a cold front?
200
Marked on a weather map as a red line with half circles on it.
What is a warm front?
200
A capital letter L stands for this on a weather map.
What is a low pressure center?
200

Narrow, fast-flowing bands of wind located high in the atmosphere (around 30,000–45,000 feet) that blow from west to east

What are the jet streams?

300
An air mass that forms over the polar regions and is cold.
What is a polar air mass?
300
The front that forms when two air masses meet and neither one takes over. Often causes many cloudy days to occur in a row.
What is a stationary front?
300
Marked on a weather map as a blue line with blue triangles on one side and red half circles on the other side.
What is a stationary front?
300
Represented by a small circle that is completely white (not colored in).
What is clear skies?
300

a belt of calm, light winds, and significant thunderstorms near the equator

What are the Doldrums?

400
An air mass that forms over the tropics and is warm.
What is a tropical air mass?
400
The type of front formed when a large mass of warm air takes over the cooler air mass. Usually produce rain, fog, or snow that lis light but steady.
What is a warm front?
400
Lines that connect areas with the same air pressure on a map.
What are isobars?
400
Often represented by asterisks or stars on a weather map.
What is snow?
400

west-to-east winds in the middle latitudes (30°–60° N/S), blowing from high-pressure sub-tropical "horse latitudes" toward the poles

What are the Prevailing Westerlies?

500
An air mass that is wet and forms over water.
What is a maritime air mass?
500
The type of front that develops when two cool air masses merge, forcing the warm air to rise and become trapped. Usually brings wind and preciptiation.
What is an occluded front?
500
Marked on the weather map as a purple line with half circles and triangles on the same side.
What is an occluded front?
500
Lines that connect areas with equal temperature on a weather map.
What are isotherms?
500

persistent winds that blow from the northeast in the Northern Hemisphere and from the southeast in the Southern Hemisphere

What are the Trade Winds?

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