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- Köppen climate classification - Wikipedia
The Köppen climate classification divides Earth climates into five main climate groups, with each group being divided based on patterns of seasonal precipitation and temperature The five main groups are A (tropical), B (arid), C (temperate), D (continental), and E (polar) Each group and subgroup is represented by a letter
- Köppen-Geiger Explorer
Interactive maps: Visually explore global maps of past, present and future climate zones according to the most commonly used Köppen-Geiger climate classification (explained here) Zoom in, pan out, and explore details down to 1 km Transitions by country: Select a country to see a summary of past or future changes in a so-called Sankey diagram
- Koppen climate classification | Definition, System, Map | Britannica
Koppen climate classification, widely used vegetation-based empirical climate-classification system developed by German botanist-climatologist Wladimir Koppen He devised formulas that would define climatic boundaries corresponding to mapped vegetation zones (biomes)
- Köppen Climate Classification System - Education | National Geographic . . .
The Köppen climate classification system is one of the most common climate classification systems in the world It is used to denote different climate regions on Earth based on local vegetation
- What Are the 5 Koppen Climate Classification Types?
The Koppen climate classification catalogs Earth's types of environments, which include tropical, dry, temperate, continental, and polar
- Köppen–Geiger Climate Classification Map
An Interactive Köppen–Geiger Climate Map of the entire world
- World Maps of Köppen-Geiger climate classification
On this web site we provide global data, world maps and computer animations of our updated Köppen-Geiger climate classification published by Kottek et al (2006), Rubel and Kottek (2010) and Rubel et al (2017)
- Köppen climate classification - Chalmers Climate Dynamics Group
These maps show the Köppen climate classification for the long-term average climate (1901–2010) The classification is based on a global observation-based dataset by Kenji Matsuura and Cort J Willmott, which combines data from several sources including GHCN2 interpolated onto a 0 5° longitude × 0 5° latitude grid
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