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COVER STORY | IN THE NEWS | STAGE MATTERS | DIRT | ARTBEAT October 18, 2007
Why do we experience summer fogs?by Don Garlick Sprinkle flour upon a lazy Susan and turn it steadily in a counter-clockwise direction to simulate the rotation of the Northern Hemisphere. Roll a marble straight across the rotating surface in any direction. You will find that the path recorded in the flour curves to the right. This apparent curvature of trajectories is known as the Coriolis Effect.
Now consider the daily baking of our Western states under a summer sun (second diagram). The air warms and tends to rise, causing an atmospheric low. Air from the Pacific attempts to flow east toward the region of low pressure. But Cor That cold, upwelled water chills the air, which has by now picked up a little moisture from the ocean. Wind stirs the air within the marine layer and, as it rises and further cools, its moisture condenses into droplets. Those droplets form fog (good for growing redwoods). The consequent temperature contrast between foggy Eureka and sunny Redding is astounding. Eureka residents drive over the Coast Ranges to see the sun, while Redding residents drive west to escape the heat. The trade winds eventually return air to the tropics, and the cycle continues. Don Garlick is a geology professor retired from HSU. He invites any questions relating to North Coast science, and if he cannot answer it he will find an expert who can. E-mail dorsgarlick@yahoo.com.HSU’s Prof. Richard Stepp pointed me in the right direction (my mind may have veered south).
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