Weather VS Climate
Uneven Heating of Earth
Convection & Wind
Climate Zones
100

Short-term conditions of the atmosphere are called this.

Weather

100

This area receives the most direct sunlight and is the warmest.

Equator 

100

Warm air does this because it becomes lighter.

Rises

100

This climate zone is near the equator and stays warm/hot year-round.

Tropical

200

This describes average weather patterns over 30 years or more.

Climate

200

These areas get less direct sunlight and are colder.

The poles

200

Cool air is denser, so it does this.
Answer: Sinks

Sinks

200

This icy zone is near the poles.

Polar

300

“Today is rainy and windy” is an example of this.

Weather

300

Because Earth is curved, sunlight strikes some places more directly than others. What is this phenomenon called?

Uneven heating

300

Rising warm air and sinking cool air create these.

Convection Currents

300

The United States and Europe are in this mild-season zone.

Temperate

400

“Deserts are dry and tropical areas are warm year-round” describes this.

Climate

400

This substance heats and cools slowly, helping coastal areas have milder climates.

Water

400

Earth’s rotation causes wind to curve, a phenomenon called this.

The Coriolis Effect

400

A region has four seasons. Summers are warm, winters are cold, and spring and fall are mild.
Which climate zone is this?

Temperate

500

A student claims that because the last two summers were hotter than normal, the climate of their region is now "hot." What is the mistake in their reasoning?

Climate describes long-term patterns over many years, so two summers is too short a period to show a climate change.

500

Why does Earth’s atmosphere have areas of warmer and cooler air? Be specific!

Because the Sun heats Earth’s surface unevenly—areas near the equator receive more direct sunlight while areas near the poles receive less—causing warm air to form where sunlight is strongest and cooler air where sunlight is weaker.

500

Why do convection currents in the atmosphere continue in a cycle instead of stopping once warm air rises?

Because after warm air rises, it cools, becomes denser, and sinks again. This sinking cool air moves back toward warmer areas, gets heated through conduction, rises once more, and the process repeats—creating a continuous cycle of rising and sinking air

500

A location receives low-angle sunlight. Winters are long and dark, summers are short and cool. Animals and plants must survive very cold conditions.
Which climate zone is this?

Polar