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2009/11/23
CLIMATE OF INDIA
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ALL COMPETITIVE GURU
2009/11/23
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CLIMATE OF INDIA
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CLIMATE OF INDIA
The lower east (Coromandel) and west (Malabar) coasts of the
Peninsula and the Ganges Delta are humid tropical; most of the
Peninsula and the Ganges-Brahmaputra Lowland are moist
subtropical to temperate; and the semiarid steppe and dry desert
of the far west are subtropical to temperate. The northern
mountains display a zonal stratification from moist subtropical to
dry arctic, depending on altitude.
Extremes of weather are even more pronounced than the wide
variety of climatic types would indicate. Thus, villages in western
Rajasthan, in the Thar (Great Indian) Desert, may experience less
than 13 cm (5 in) of rainfall yearly, while 2,400 km (1,500 mi)
eastward, in the Khasi Hills of Assam, Cherrapunji averages
about 1,143 cm (450 in) yearly. Sections of the Malabar Coast
and hill stations in the Himalayas regularly receive 250–760 cm
(100–300 in) yearly; many areas of the heavily populated Ganges-
Brahmaputra Lowland and the Peninsula receive under 100 cm
(40 in). Winter snowfall is normal for the northern mountains
and Kashmir Valley, but for most of India, scorching spring dust
storms and severe hailstorms are more common. The northern
half of the country is subject to frost from November through
February, but by May a temperature as high as 49°C (120°F) in
the shade may be recorded. High relative humidity is general
from April through September. Extratropical cyclones (similar to
hurricanes) often strike the coastal areas between April and June
and between September and December.
The monsoon is the predominant feature of India’s climate and
helps to divide the year into four seasons: rainy, the southwest
monsoon, June–September; moist, the retreating monsoon,
October–November; dry cool, the northeast monsoon,
December–March; hot, April–May. The southwest monsoon
brings from the Indian Ocean the moisture on which Indian
agriculture relies. Unfortunately, neither the exact times of its
annual arrival and departure nor its duration and intensity can be
predicted, and variations are great. In 1987, the failure of the
southwest monsoon resulted in one of India’s worst droughts of
the century.
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