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- Climate_of_India abstract "Analysed according to the Köppen system, the climate of India resolves into six major climatic subtypes; their influences give rise to desert in the west, alpine tundra and glaciers in the north, humid tropical regions supporting rain forests in the southwest, and Indian Ocean island territories that flank the Indian subcontinent. Regions have starkly different—yet tightly clustered—microclimates. The nation is largely subject to four seasons: winter (January and February), summer (March to May), a monsoon (rainy) season (June to September), and a post-monsoon period (October to December).India's geography and geology are climatically pivotal: the Thar Desert in the northwest and the Himalayas in the north work in tandem to effect a culturally and economically break-all monsoonal regime. As Earth's highest and most massive mountain range, the Himalayan system bars the influx of frigid katabatic winds from the icy Tibetan Plateau and northerly Central Asia. Most of North India is thus kept warm or is only mildly chilly or cold during winter; the same thermal dam keeps most regions in India hot in summer.Though the Tropic of Cancer—the boundary between the tropics and subtropics—passes through the middle of India, the bulk of the country can be regarded as climatically tropical. As in much of the tropics, monsoonal and other weather patterns in India can be wildly unstable: epochal droughts, floods, cyclones, and other natural disasters are sporadic, but have displaced or ended millions of human lives. There is widespread scientific consensus that South Asia is likely to see such climatic events, along with their aleatory unpredictability, to change in frequency and are likely to increase in severity. Ongoing and future vegetative changes and current sea level rises and the attendant inundation of India's low-lying coastal areas are other impacts, current or predicted, that are attributable to global warming.".
- Climate_of_India thumbnail Agasthiyamalai_range_and_Tirunelveli_rainshadow.jpg?width=300.
- Climate_of_India wikiPageExternalLink IN_cc.html.
- Climate_of_India wikiPageExternalLink results.shtml?tt=TT002240.
- Climate_of_India wikiPageExternalLink 3usde.pdf.
- Climate_of_India wikiPageExternalLink www.imd.gov.in.
- Climate_of_India wikiPageExternalLink climate.php.
- Climate_of_India wikiPageExternalLink www.weather.nic.in.
- Climate_of_India wikiPageExternalLink weatherall.php3?s=44534&refer=&units=metric.
- Climate_of_India wikiPageExternalLink c00523.htm=.
- Climate_of_India wikiPageExternalLink in.html.
- Climate_of_India wikiPageID "797653".
- Climate_of_India wikiPageRevisionID "606700200".
- Climate_of_India align "right".
- Climate_of_India alt "Daytime view of a montaine valley set between two peaks at left and right, their peaks cloaked by cloud cover. All present an aspect of summer verdure: grassland meadows and wildflowers. Rocky snow-capped peaks are seen in the far distance, between the flanking peaks in the middle distance.".
- Climate_of_India alt "Daytime view of an almost lifeless expanse, dry rocks and sand marked only by the odd lone shrub. The dry terrain reaches to a chain of mountains in the far distance, near the horizon. A bank of clouds soars above the void, but it does not appear to hold the promise of rain. A far darker, larger, more turgid cloud bank sits above the distant mountains, above the horizon.".
- Climate_of_India b "y".
- Climate_of_India caption "A semi-arid wasteland near thirunelveli, Tamil Nadu. Monsoon clouds dump torrents of rain on lush forests only kilometres away in windward-facing Kerala. The Agasthyamalai Range mostly stops them from reaching Tirunelveli.".
- Climate_of_India caption "Uttarakhand's Valley of Flowers National Park. Its mountainous windward-facing location wedged between the Zanskars and the Greater Himalayas affords it ample orographic precipitation.".
- Climate_of_India commons "y".
- Climate_of_India direction "vertical".
- Climate_of_India hasPhotoCollection Climate_of_India.
- Climate_of_India image "Agasthiyamalai range and Tirunelveli rainshadow.jpg".
- Climate_of_India image "Valley of flowers uttaranchal full view.JPG".
- Climate_of_India n "y".
- Climate_of_India q "y".
- Climate_of_India s "y".
- Climate_of_India title "Links to related articles".
- Climate_of_India v "y".
- Climate_of_India width "200".
- Climate_of_India subject Category:Climate_of_India.
- Climate_of_India comment "Analysed according to the Köppen system, the climate of India resolves into six major climatic subtypes; their influences give rise to desert in the west, alpine tundra and glaciers in the north, humid tropical regions supporting rain forests in the southwest, and Indian Ocean island territories that flank the Indian subcontinent. Regions have starkly different—yet tightly clustered—microclimates.".
- Climate_of_India label "Clima da Índia".
- Climate_of_India label "Clima de la India".
- Climate_of_India label "Clima dell'India".
- Climate_of_India label "Climat en Inde".
- Climate_of_India label "Climate of India".
- Climate_of_India label "Klimaat in India".
- Climate_of_India label "Климат Индии".
- Climate_of_India sameAs Clima_de_la_India.
- Climate_of_India sameAs Climat_en_Inde.
- Climate_of_India sameAs Clima_dell'India.
- Climate_of_India sameAs Klimaat_in_India.
- Climate_of_India sameAs Clima_da_Índia.
- Climate_of_India sameAs Q2091594.
- Climate_of_India sameAs Q2091594.
- Climate_of_India wasDerivedFrom Climate_of_India?oldid=606700200.
- Climate_of_India depiction Agasthiyamalai_range_and_Tirunelveli_rainshadow.jpg.
- Climate_of_India isPrimaryTopicOf Climate_of_India.