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File:Rain shadow effect.jpg
Effect of a rain shadow
File:Himalaya composite.jpg
The Tibetan Plateau (center), perhaps the best example of a rain shadow. Rainfalls from the southern South Asian monsoon do not make it far past the Himalayas (seen by the snow line at the bottom), leading to an arid climate on the leeward (north) side of the mountain range and the desertification of the Tarim Basin (top).

A rain shadow is an area of significantly reduced rainfall behind a mountainous region, on the side facing away from prevailing winds, known as its leeward side.

Evaporated moisture from bodies of water (such as oceans and large lakes) is carried by the prevailing onshore breezes towards the drier and hotter inland areas. When encountering elevated landforms, the moist air is driven upslope towards the peak, where it expands, cools, and its moisture condenses and starts to precipitate. If the landforms are tall and wide enough, most of the humidity will be lost to precipitation over the windward side (also known as the rainward side) before ever making it past the top. As the air descends the leeward side of the landforms, it is compressed and heated, producing Foehn winds that absorb moisture downslope and cast a broad "shadow" of dry climate region behind the mountain crests. This climate typically takes the form of shrub–steppe, xeric shrublands, or deserts.

The condition exists because warm moist air rises by orographic lifting to the top of a mountain range. As atmospheric pressure decreases with increasing altitude, the air has expanded and adiabatically cooled to the point that the air reaches its adiabatic dew point (which is not the same as its constant pressure dew point commonly reported in weather forecasts). At the adiabatic dew point, moisture condenses onto the mountain and it precipitates on the top and windward sides of the mountain. The air descends on the leeward side, but due to the precipitation it has lost much of its moisture. Typically, descending air also gets warmer because of adiabatic compression (as with foehn winds) down the leeward side of the mountain, which increases the amount of moisture that it can absorb and creates an arid region.<ref name="Whiteman">Template:Cite book</ref>

Notably affected regionsEdit

There are regular patterns of prevailing winds found in bands round Earth's equatorial region. The zone designated the trade winds is the zone between about 30° N and 30° S, blowing predominantly from the northeast in the Northern Hemisphere and from the southeast in the Southern Hemisphere.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The westerlies are the prevailing winds in the middle latitudes between 30 and 60 degrees latitude, blowing predominantly from the southwest in the Northern Hemisphere and from the northwest in the Southern Hemisphere.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Some of the strongest westerly winds in the middle latitudes can come in the Roaring Forties of the Southern Hemisphere, between 30 and 50 degrees latitude.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Examples of notable rain shadowing include:

AfricaEdit

Northern AfricaEdit

File:Algeria.A2002118.1040.250m.jpg
The Atlas Mountains' (top) rain shadow effect makes the Sahara even drier.
  • The Sahara is made even drier because of a strong rain shadow effects caused by major mountain ranges (whose highest points can culminate up to more than 4,000 meters; 2½ miles high). To the northwest, the Atlas Mountains, covering the Mediterranean coast for Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia. On the windward side of the Atlas Mountains, the warm, moist winds blowing from the northwest off the Atlantic Ocean, which contain a lot of water vapor, are forced to rise, lift up and expand over the mountain range. This causes them to cool down, which causes an excess of moisture to condense into high clouds and results in heavy precipitation over the mountain range. This is known as orographic rainfall and after this process, the air is dry because it has lost most of its moisture over the Atlas Mountains. On the leeward side, the cold, dry air starts to descend and to sink and compress, making the winds warm up. This warming causes the moisture to evaporate, making clouds disappear. This prevents rainfall formation and creates desert conditions in the Sahara.
  • Desert regions in the Horn of Africa (Ethiopia, Eritrea, Somalia and Djibouti) such as the Danakil Desert are all influenced by the air heating and drying produced by rain shadow effect of the Ethiopian Highlands.

Southern AfricaEdit

File:A virtually cloudless image of Madagascar ESA230211.jpg
The mountain ranges on the eastern side of Madagascar provide a rain shadow for the country's western portion.

AsiaEdit

Central and Northern AsiaEdit

Eastern AsiaEdit

Southern AsiaEdit

File:Ghat satellite view.jpg
The eastern regions of the Western Ghats lie in a rain shadow, receiving far less rainfall.

Western AsiaEdit

File:Envisat image of the southern Caspian Sea ESA223952.tiff
Most of Iran is rain-shadowed by the Alborz mountains in the north (just south of the Caspian Sea), hence the country's mostly (semi) arid climate.
File:Reviving the Shriveled Lake Urmia.jpg
Lake Urmia (centre) and surrounds rain-shadowed by the snowy Zagros mountains to the west.

EuropeEdit

Central EuropeEdit

  • The Plains of Limagne and Forez in the northern Massif Central, France are also relatively rainshadowed (mostly the plain of Limagne, shadowed by the Chaîne des Puys (up to 2000 mm; 80" of rain a year on the summits and below 600mm; 20" at Clermont-Ferrand, which is one of the driest places in the country).
  • The Piedmont wine region of northern Italy is rainshadowed by the mountains that surround it on nearly every side: Asti receives only Template:Convert of precipitation per year, making it one of the driest places in mainland Italy.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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Northern EuropeEdit

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  • Iceland has plenty of microclimates courtesy of the mountainous terrain. Akureyri on a northerly fiord receives about a third of the precipitation that the island of Vestmannaeyjar off the south coast gets. The smaller island is in the pathway of Gulf Stream rain fronts with mountains lining the southern coast of the mainland.
  • The Scandinavian Mountains create a rain shadow for lowland areas east of the mountain chain and prevents the Oceanic climate from penetrating further east; thus Bergen and a place like Brekke in Sogn, west of the mountains, receive an annual precipitation of Template:Convert, respectively,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> while Oslo receives only Template:Convert, and Skjåk Municipality, a municipality situated in a deep valley, receives only Template:Convert. Further east, the partial influence of the Scandinavian Mountains contribute to areas in east-central Sweden around Stockholm only receiving Template:Convert annually. In the north, the mountain range extending to the coast in around Narvik and Tromsø cause a lot higher precipitation there than in coastal areas further east facing north such as Alta or inland areas like Kiruna across the Swedish border.

  • The South Swedish highlands, although not rising more than Template:Convert, reduce precipitation and increase summer temperatures on the eastern side. Combined with the high pressure of the Baltic Sea, this leads to some of the driest climates in the humid zones of Northern Europe being found in the triangle between the coastal areas in the counties of Kalmar, Östergötland and Södermanland along with the offshore island of Gotland on the leeward side of the slopes. Coastal areas in this part of Sweden usually receive less precipitation than windward locations in Andalusia in the south of Spain.<ref name=SMHInederbörd19912020>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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Southern EuropeEdit

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CaribbeanEdit

North American mainlandEdit

File:Great Basin map.gif
The Cascade Range to the north and the California Coast Ranges and the Sierra Nevada to the south provide a significant rain-shadow for the inland North American deserts.

On the largest scale, the entirety of the North American Interior Plains are shielded from the prevailing Westerlies carrying moist Pacific weather by the North American Cordillera. More pronounced effects are observed, however, in particular valley regions within the Cordillera, in the direct lee of specific mountain ranges.<ref name="usatoday" /> This includes much of the Basin and Range Province in the United States and Mexico.

The Pacific Coast Ranges create rain shadows near the West Coast:

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Most rain shadows in the western United States are due to the Sierra Nevada mountains in California and Cascade Mountains, mostly in Oregon and Washington.<ref name="usatoday">Template:Cite news</ref>

  • The Cascades create a rain-shadowed Columbia Basin area of Eastern Washington and valleys in British Columbia, Canada - most notably the Thompson and Nicola Valleys which can receive less than Template:Convert of rain in parts, and the Okanagan Valley (particularly the south, nearest to the US border) which receives anywhere from 12 to 17 inches of rain annually.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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The Colorado Front Range is limited to precipitation that crosses over the Continental Divide. While many locations west of the Divide may receive as much as Template:Convert of precipitation per year, some places on the eastern side, notably the cities of Denver and Pueblo, Colorado, typically receive only about 12 to 19 inches. Thus, the Continental Divide acts as a barrier for precipitation. This effect applies only to storms traveling west-to-east. When low pressure systems skirt the Rocky Mountains and approach from the south, they can generate high precipitation on the eastern side and little or none on the western slope.

Further east:

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  • Ashcroft, British Columbia, the only true desert in Canada, sits in the rain shadow of the Coast Mountains of Canada.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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OceaniaEdit

AustraliaEdit

File:The Great Barrier Reef, Australia - Envisat.jpg
The Atherton Tableland rain-shadowing the dry Tablelands Region in Queensland (bottom-right).
File:New Zealand as seen by Envisat ESA217570.jpg
The Southern Alps in New Zealand rain shadow the eastern side of the South Island.

Pacific IslandsEdit

South AmericaEdit

File:Satellite image of Bolivia in June 2002.jpg
The Andes mountains block rain and moisture from the Amazon basin to the west (Bolivia).
  • The Atacama Desert in Chile is the driest non-polar desert on Earth because it is blocked from moisture by the Andes Mountains to the east while the Humboldt Current causes persistent atmospheric stability.
  • Cuyo and Eastern Patagonia is rain shadowed from the prevailing westerly winds by the Andes range and is arid. The aridity of the lands next to eastern piedmont of the Andes decreases to the south due to a decrease in the height of the Andes with the consequence that the Patagonian Desert develop more fully at the Atlantic coast contributing to shaping the climatic pattern known as the Arid Diagonal.<ref name=Bruniard>Template:Cite journal</ref> The Argentinian wine region of Cuyo and Northern Patagonia is almost completely dependent on irrigation, using water drawn from the many rivers that drain glacial ice from the Andes.
  • The Guajira Peninsula in northern Colombia is in the rain shadow of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta and despite its tropical latitude is almost arid, receiving almost no rainfall for seven to eight months of the year and being incapable of cultivation without irrigation.

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit