1
Thumbs Up |
Received: 12,015 Given: 18,435 |
Thumbs Up |
Received: 12,173 Given: 7,962 |
Oh! We do have conifers here, but they are not native, they were introduced here and are spread throughout the state of São Paulo and belive in other states too, here's a pic o the town of Apiaí in the state of São Paulo, I think they are Pinus elliottii, but I'm not sure:
Thumbs Up |
Received: 82 Given: 69 |
Torres del Paine (Southern Chile)
Punta Arenas
Thumbs Up |
Received: 4,467 Given: 3,569 |
The Chilean area with a desert climate climate (BWk on Köppen-Geiger) seems to be bigger than the area with the Mediterranean climate:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...ld_Map_BWk.png
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mediterranean_climate
Thumbs Up |
Received: 2,139 Given: 800 |
Thumbs Up |
Received: 325 Given: 47 |
what architectures of cities has to do with climate?
Thumbs Up |
Received: 3,787 Given: 2,516 |
Chile
First only chile and Argentina can have the latitudinal range of Europe.
Then Chile between the two is the only one that has less desertic climate; while Argentina instead it s mostly desertic climate where th latitude is similar to europe.
chile has Csb, Cfb, Cfc climates that are found in Europe too
Thumbs Up |
Received: 1,628 Given: 697 |
It's Chile everyone knows that. Southern Chile is fairly similar to France, England, Northern Spain.. Central Chile is similar to Central Spain.. North-central Chile is like Southern Spain.. and Northern Chile is more like Northern Africa but then again no one lives there. And the Chilean Patagonia is pretty similar to Norway in some areas with its fjords and stuff.
Buenos Aires is extremely warm and humid in the summer, not even Almería in Southern Spain is like that. The Argentinian Patagonia is desertic as fuck, there's no place in Europe like that.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks