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Foehn wind

A Foehn or Föhn (UK: /fɜːn/, US: /fn/,[2][3] US also /fʌn, fɜːrn/[4][5]), is a type of dry, relatively warm, downslope wind that occurs in the lee (downwind side) of a mountain range. It is a rain shadow wind that results from the subsequent adiabatic warming of air that has dropped most of its moisture on windward slopes (see orographic lift). As a consequence of the different adiabatic lapse rates of moist and dry air, the air on the leeward slopes becomes warmer than equivalent elevations on the windward slopes.

The causes of the Foehn effect in the lee of mountains. Adapted from [1].
Dissolving Föhn clouds over Cumbre Nueva (1400 m), La Palma

Foehn winds can raise temperatures by as much as 14 °C (25 °F)[6] in just a matter of hours. Switzerland, southern Germany and Austria have a warmer climate due to the Foehn, as moist winds off the Mediterranean Sea blow over the Alps.

Etymology edit

The name Foehn (German: Föhn, pronounced [ˈføːn]) arose in the Alpine region. Originating from Latin (ventus) favonius, a mild west wind of which Favonius was the Roman personification[7] and probably transmitted by Romansh: favuogn or just fuogn, the term was adopted as Old High German: phōnno. In the Southern Alps, the phenomenon is known as Föhn but also Italian: favonio and fen in Serbo-Croatian and Slovene. The German word Föhn (pronounced the same way) also means 'hairdryer', while the word Fön is a genericized trademark today owned by AEG.[8] The form phon is used in French-speaking parts of Switzerland as well as in Italy.

The name Föhn was originally used to refer to the south wind which blows during the winter months and brings thaw conditions to the northern side of the Alps. Because Föhn later became a generic term that was extended to other mountain ranges around the world that experience similar phenomena, the name "Alpine föhn" (Alpenföhn) was coined for the Föhns of the Alpine region.[9]

Causes edit

 
The warm moist air from northern Italy is blocked on the windward side, loses much of its water vapour content, and descends on the French plateau and valley of the Mont-Cenis range in the Maurienne valley

There are four known causes of the Foehn warming and drying effect.[1] These mechanisms often act together, with their contributions varying depending on the size and shape of the mountain barrier and on the meteorological conditions, such as the upstream wind speed, temperature and humidity.

Condensation and precipitation edit

When winds blow over elevated terrain, air forced upwards expands and cools due to the decrease in pressure with height. Since colder air can hold less water vapour, moisture condenses to form clouds and precipitates as rain or snow on the mountain's upwind slopes. The change of state from vapour to liquid water releases latent heat energy which heats the air, partially countering the cooling that occurs as the air rises. The subsequent removal of moisture as precipitation renders this heat gain by the air irreversible, leading to the warm, dry, Foehn conditions as the air descends in the mountain's lee. This mechanism has become a popular textbook example of atmospheric thermodynamics. However, the common occurrence of 'dry' Foehn events, where there is no precipitation, implies there must be other mechanisms.

 
Rotor cloud revealing overturning and turbulence above the lee slopes of the Antarctic Peninsula during a westerly Foehn event.

Isentropic draw-down edit

Isentropic draw-down is the draw-down of warmer, drier air from aloft. When the approaching winds are insufficiently strong to propel the low-level air up and over the mountain barrier, the airflow is said to be 'blocked' by the mountain and only air higher up near mountain-top level is able to pass over and down the lee slopes as Foehn winds. These higher source regions provide Foehn air that becomes warmer and drier on the leeside after it is compressed with descent due to the increase in pressure towards the surface.

Mechanical mixing edit

When river water passes over rocks, turbulence is generated in the form of rapids, and white water reveals the turbulent mixing of the water with the air above. Similarly, as air passes over mountains, turbulence occurs and the atmosphere is mixed in the vertical. This mixing generally leads to a downward warming and upward moistening of the cross-mountain airflow, and consequently to warmer, drier Foehn winds in the valleys downwind.

Radiative warming edit

Dry Foehn conditions are responsible for the occurrence of rain shadows in the lee of mountains, where clear, sunny conditions prevail. This often leads to greater daytime radiative (solar) warming under Foehn conditions. This type of warming is particularly important in cold regions where snow or ice melt is a concern or where avalanches are a risk.

Effects edit

Winds of this type are also called "snow-eaters" for their ability to make snow and ice melt or sublimate rapidly. This is a result not only of the warmth of Foehn air, but also its low relative humidity. Accordingly, Foehn winds are known to contribute to the disintegration of ice shelves in the polar regions.[10]

Foehn winds are notorious among mountaineers in the Alps, especially those climbing the Eiger, for whom the winds add further difficulty in ascending an already difficult peak.

They are also associated with the rapid spread of wildfires, making some regions which experience these winds particularly fire-prone.

Purported physiological effects edit

Anecdotally, residents in areas of frequent Foehn winds have reported experiencing a variety of illnesses ranging from migraines to psychosis. The first clinical review of these effects was published by the Austrian physician Anton Czermak in the 19th century.[11] A study by the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München found that suicide and accidents increased by 10 percent during Foehn winds in Central Europe.[citation needed] The causation of Föhnkrankheit (English: Foehn-sickness) is unproven. Labels for preparations of aspirin combined with caffeine, codeine and the like will sometimes include Föhnkrankheit amongst the indications.[citation needed][12] Evidence for effects from Chinook winds remain anecdotal, as it does for New Zealand's Nor'wester.[13]

In some regions, Foehn winds are associated with causing circulatory problems, headaches, or similar ailments.[14] Researchers have found, however, the Foehn wind's warm temperature to be beneficial to humans in most situations, and have theorised that the reported negative effects may be a result of secondary factors, such as changes in the electrical field or in the ion state of the atmosphere, the wind's relatively low humidity, or the generally unpleasant sensation of being in an environment with strong and gusty winds.[14]

Local examples edit

Regionally, these winds are known by many different names. These include:

in Africa
in the Americas
in Antarctica
in Asia
in Europe
 
Foehn clouds upon the Karawanken mountain range, Carinthia, Austria
 
Foehn clouds over La Palma, Spain
in Oceania

In popular culture edit

  • The Foehn was mentioned by Queen's lead guitarist Brian May while talking about the band's grim Munich recording studio experience in 1982.[22]
  • The foehn is attributed by the narrator of Jens Bjørneboe's 1966 novel Frihetens øyeblikk (Moment of Freedom) as the traditional cause of occasional unprovoked murders in a small Alpine town.[23]
  • "Foehn" is the last word in A Nest of Ninnies, a 1969 novel by John Ashbery and James Schuyler. Ashbery claimed that he and Schuyler chose this particular word because "people, if they bothered to, would have to open the dictionary to find out what the last word in the novel meant".[24]
  • Fønfjord, meaning "Foehn Fjord", was named by Arctic explorer Carl Ryder after the powerful Foehn wind gusts blowing during the first exploration of the fjord in August 1891.[25]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  • McKnight, TL & Hess, Darrel (2000). "Foehn/Chinook Winds". In Physical Geography: A Landscape Appreciation, p. 132. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-020263-0.

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b Elvidge, Andrew D.; Renfrew, Ian A. (14 May 2015). "The Causes of Foehn Warming in the Lee of Mountains". Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 97 (3): 455–466. Bibcode:2016BAMS...97..455E. doi:10.1175/bams-d-14-00194.1.
  2. ^ Jones, Daniel (2011). Roach, Peter; Setter, Jane; Esling, John (eds.). Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary (18th ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-15255-6.
  3. ^ Wells, John C. (2008). Longman Pronunciation Dictionary (3rd ed.). Longman. ISBN 978-1-4058-8118-0.
  4. ^ Upton, Clive; Kretzschmar, William A. Jr. (2017). The Routledge Dictionary of Pronunciation for Current English (2nd ed.). Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-12566-7.
  5. ^ "foehn". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Retrieved 2022-03-17.
  6. ^ "South Dakota Weather History and Trivia for January". National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office. February 8, 2006. See January 22 entry.
  7. ^ Concise Oxford Dictionary, 10th edition, Oxford University Press, entry föhn.
  8. ^ "22. Januar 2009 – Vor 100 Jahren: "Fön" ins Markenregister eingetragen". WDR.de. 2009-01-22. Retrieved 2019-12-21.
  9. ^ Der Brockhaus. Wetter und Klima. Seite 101, Brockhaus, Leipzig/Mannheim, 2009, ISBN 978-3-7653-3381-1
  10. ^ Elvidge, Andrew D.; Renfrew, Ian A.; King, John C.; Orr, Andrew; Lachlan-Cope, Tom A. (January 2016). "Foehn warming distributions in nonlinear and linear flow regimes: a focus on the Antarctic Peninsula" (PDF). Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society. 142 (695): 618–631. Bibcode:2016QJRMS.142..618E. doi:10.1002/qj.2489.
  11. ^ Giannini, AJ; Malone, DA; Piotrowski, TA (1986). "The serotonin irritation syndrome – a new clinical entity?". The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry. 47 (1): 22–25. PMID 2416736.
  12. ^ See the documentary: Snow Eater (the English translation of Canadian First Nations word phonetically pronounced chinook). telefilm.ca 2013-10-17 at the Wayback Machine.
  13. ^ Brook, K., "Grumpy nor'west winds," University of Canterbury, 2 December 2014. Retrieved 22 November 2023.
  14. ^ a b Tuller, Stanton E. (April 1980). "The Effects of a Foehn Wind on Human Thermal Exchange: The Canterbury Nor'wester". New Zealand Geographer. 36 (1): 11–19. doi:10.1111/j.1745-7939.1980.tb01919.x.
  15. ^ David M. Gaffin (2007). "Foehn Winds That Produced Large Temperature Differences near the Southern Appalachian Mountains". Weather and Forecasting. 22 (1): 145–159. Bibcode:2007WtFor..22..145G. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.549.7012. doi:10.1175/WAF970.1. S2CID 120049170.
  16. ^ David M. Gaffin (2002). "Unexpected Warming Induced by Foehn Winds in the Lee of the Smoky Mountains". Weather and Forecasting. 17 (4): 907–915. Bibcode:2002WtFor..17..907G. doi:10.1175/1520-0434(2002)017<0907:UWIBFW>2.0.CO;2.
  17. ^ "Wind Names". ggweather.com.
  18. ^ Romanić; et al. (2015). "Contributing factors to Koshava wind characteristics". International Journal of Climatology. 36 (2): 956–973. Bibcode:2016IJCli..36..956R. doi:10.1002/joc.4397. S2CID 129669216.
  19. ^ Romanić; et al. (2015). "Long-term trends of the 'Koshava' wind during the period 1949–2010". International Journal of Climatology. 35 (3): 288–302. Bibcode:2015IJCli..35..288R. doi:10.1002/joc.3981. S2CID 129402302.
  20. ^ Sharples, J.J. Mills, G.A., McRae, R.H.D., Weber, R.O. (2010) Elevated fire danger conditions associated with foehn-like winds in southeastern Australia. Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology.
  21. ^ Relph, D. "The Canterbury nor'wester," New Zealand Geographic. Retrieved 17 February 2018.
  22. ^ "Brian News". brianmay.com. September 2012.
  23. ^ Bjørneboe, Jens (1966). Frihetens øyeblikk (in Norwegian). Oslo: Gyldendal Norsk Forlag. pp. 32–33, 180–185. ISBN 8205234841.
  24. ^ John Ashbery (1983). "The Art of Poetry No. 33". theparisreview.org. Vol. Winter 1983, no. 90.
  25. ^ "Place names, northern East Greenland". data.geus.dk.

External links edit

  • Photo of Föhnmauer The strong clouds at the mountain ridges where the Föhn winds form are called Föhnmauer (Föhn wall).
  • Illustration
  • Movie of a Föhn situation in the Swiss Alps
  • East Scotland warmth due to Foehn Effect
  • Foehn chart provided by meteomedia/meteocentrale.ch

foehn, wind, föhn, redirects, here, antiaircraft, rocket, henschel, foehn, föhn, ɜː, also, ɜːr, type, relatively, warm, downslope, wind, that, occurs, downwind, side, mountain, range, rain, shadow, wind, that, results, from, subsequent, adiabatic, warming, tha. Fohn redirects here For the antiaircraft rocket see Henschel Hs 297 A Foehn or Fohn UK f ɜː n US f eɪ n 2 3 US also f ʌ n f ɜːr n 4 5 is a type of dry relatively warm downslope wind that occurs in the lee downwind side of a mountain range It is a rain shadow wind that results from the subsequent adiabatic warming of air that has dropped most of its moisture on windward slopes see orographic lift As a consequence of the different adiabatic lapse rates of moist and dry air the air on the leeward slopes becomes warmer than equivalent elevations on the windward slopes The causes of the Foehn effect in the lee of mountains Adapted from 1 Dissolving Fohn clouds over Cumbre Nueva 1400 m La PalmaFoehn winds can raise temperatures by as much as 14 C 25 F 6 in just a matter of hours Switzerland southern Germany and Austria have a warmer climate due to the Foehn as moist winds off the Mediterranean Sea blow over the Alps Contents 1 Etymology 2 Causes 2 1 Condensation and precipitation 2 2 Isentropic draw down 2 3 Mechanical mixing 2 4 Radiative warming 3 Effects 4 Purported physiological effects 5 Local examples 6 In popular culture 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Footnotes 10 External linksEtymology editThe name Foehn German Fohn pronounced ˈfoːn arose in the Alpine region Originating from Latin ventus favonius a mild west wind of which Favonius was the Roman personification 7 and probably transmitted by Romansh favuogn or just fuogn the term was adopted as Old High German phōnno In the Southern Alps the phenomenon is known as Fohn but also Italian favonio and fen in Serbo Croatian and Slovene The German word Fohn pronounced the same way also means hairdryer while the word Fon is a genericized trademark today owned by AEG 8 The form phon is used in French speaking parts of Switzerland as well as in Italy The name Fohn was originally used to refer to the south wind which blows during the winter months and brings thaw conditions to the northern side of the Alps Because Fohn later became a generic term that was extended to other mountain ranges around the world that experience similar phenomena the name Alpine fohn Alpenfohn was coined for the Fohns of the Alpine region 9 Causes edit nbsp The warm moist air from northern Italy is blocked on the windward side loses much of its water vapour content and descends on the French plateau and valley of the Mont Cenis range in the Maurienne valleyThere are four known causes of the Foehn warming and drying effect 1 These mechanisms often act together with their contributions varying depending on the size and shape of the mountain barrier and on the meteorological conditions such as the upstream wind speed temperature and humidity Condensation and precipitation edit When winds blow over elevated terrain air forced upwards expands and cools due to the decrease in pressure with height Since colder air can hold less water vapour moisture condenses to form clouds and precipitates as rain or snow on the mountain s upwind slopes The change of state from vapour to liquid water releases latent heat energy which heats the air partially countering the cooling that occurs as the air rises The subsequent removal of moisture as precipitation renders this heat gain by the air irreversible leading to the warm dry Foehn conditions as the air descends in the mountain s lee This mechanism has become a popular textbook example of atmospheric thermodynamics However the common occurrence of dry Foehn events where there is no precipitation implies there must be other mechanisms nbsp Rotor cloud revealing overturning and turbulence above the lee slopes of the Antarctic Peninsula during a westerly Foehn event Isentropic draw down edit Isentropic draw down is the draw down of warmer drier air from aloft When the approaching winds are insufficiently strong to propel the low level air up and over the mountain barrier the airflow is said to be blocked by the mountain and only air higher up near mountain top level is able to pass over and down the lee slopes as Foehn winds These higher source regions provide Foehn air that becomes warmer and drier on the leeside after it is compressed with descent due to the increase in pressure towards the surface Mechanical mixing edit When river water passes over rocks turbulence is generated in the form of rapids and white water reveals the turbulent mixing of the water with the air above Similarly as air passes over mountains turbulence occurs and the atmosphere is mixed in the vertical This mixing generally leads to a downward warming and upward moistening of the cross mountain airflow and consequently to warmer drier Foehn winds in the valleys downwind Radiative warming edit Dry Foehn conditions are responsible for the occurrence of rain shadows in the lee of mountains where clear sunny conditions prevail This often leads to greater daytime radiative solar warming under Foehn conditions This type of warming is particularly important in cold regions where snow or ice melt is a concern or where avalanches are a risk Effects editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Winds of this type are also called snow eaters for their ability to make snow and ice melt or sublimate rapidly This is a result not only of the warmth of Foehn air but also its low relative humidity Accordingly Foehn winds are known to contribute to the disintegration of ice shelves in the polar regions 10 Foehn winds are notorious among mountaineers in the Alps especially those climbing the Eiger for whom the winds add further difficulty in ascending an already difficult peak They are also associated with the rapid spread of wildfires making some regions which experience these winds particularly fire prone Purported physiological effects editAnecdotally residents in areas of frequent Foehn winds have reported experiencing a variety of illnesses ranging from migraines to psychosis The first clinical review of these effects was published by the Austrian physician Anton Czermak in the 19th century 11 A study by the Ludwig Maximilians Universitat Munchen found that suicide and accidents increased by 10 percent during Foehn winds in Central Europe citation needed The causation of Fohnkrankheit English Foehn sickness is unproven Labels for preparations of aspirin combined with caffeine codeine and the like will sometimes include Fohnkrankheit amongst the indications citation needed 12 Evidence for effects from Chinook winds remain anecdotal as it does for New Zealand s Nor wester 13 In some regions Foehn winds are associated with causing circulatory problems headaches or similar ailments 14 Researchers have found however the Foehn wind s warm temperature to be beneficial to humans in most situations and have theorised that the reported negative effects may be a result of secondary factors such as changes in the electrical field or in the ion state of the atmosphere the wind s relatively low humidity or the generally unpleasant sensation of being in an environment with strong and gusty winds 14 Local examples editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Regionally these winds are known by many different names These include in AfricaBergwind in South Africain the AmericasThe Brookings Effect on the southwestern coast of Oregon also known as the Chetco Effect Chinook winds east of the Rocky Mountains and the Cascade Range in the United States and Canada and north east and west of the Chugach Mountains of Alaska United States Foehn winds in the foothills of the southern Appalachian mountains 15 which can be unusual compared to other Foehn winds in that the relative humidity typically changes little due to the increased moisture in the source air mass 16 The Santa Ana winds of southern California including the Sundowner winds of Santa Barbara are in some ways similar to the Fohn but originate in dry deserts as a katabatic wind However traditional Fohn conditions frequently prevail along the Santa Monica and Santa Ana Mountains and their respective leeward valleys the San Fernando Valley and the Riverside County portion of the Inland Empire region Puelche wind in Chile Suetes on the west coast of Cape Breton Island Nova Scotia Canada Wreckhouse winds in the southwest corner of the island of Newfoundland Newfoundland and Labrador Canada Zonda winds in Argentinain AntarcticaFohn wall on Signy Island South Orkneysin AsiaGarmesh Garmij Garmbaad lit transl Warm wind Persian گرمباد Gilaki گرمش in Gilan region near the Alborz in the south west of Caspian Sea in Iran In winter a Foehn effect occurs in the West Azerbaijan province Iran around Lake Urmia as manifested by the province s dry winters relative to those in the windward part of the region Northern Iraq or Kurdistan Region and Hakkari Province in Turkey For example the winter rainfall of Urmia and Salmas in Iranian Azerbaijan is much lower than Batifa and Soran in Iraqi Kurdistan and Hakkari in the Hakkari Province which are roughly on the same latitude but are on the windward side of the Zagros mountains Loo in Indo Gangetic Plain Warm Braw in the Schouten Islands north of West Papua Indonesia 17 Wuhan in China is famously known as one of the Three Furnaces on account of its extremely hot weather in summer resulting from the adiabatic warming effect created by mountains further south Laos wind Vietnamese gio Lao hot dry west wind Vietnamese gio tay kho nong in northern and central Vietnam in Europe nbsp Foehn clouds upon the Karawanken mountain range Carinthia Austria nbsp Foehn clouds over La Palma SpainFavonio in Ticino and north western Italy due to western and northern winds crossing the Alps mostly in winter Garbino in the Adriatic coast of Italy due to south western winds crossing the Apennine Mountains mostly in fall and winter Fen in northwest Slovenia Fonvind in South Norway in particular Central Norway resulting in extreme winter warming including Scandinavia s warmest winter temperature in Sunndalsora Fogony in the Catalan Pyrenees Fohn or Foehn in Austria southern Germany Switzerland France and Liechtenstein Fohn in Ostrobothnia and Western Lapland in Finland as moist air crosses Scandinavian Mountains and dries up Halny in the Carpathian Mountains Poland Central Europe The Helm Wind on the Pennines in the Eden Valley Cumbria England Hnjukatheyr in Icelandic Lodos wind causing warm temperatures in the leeward side of mountains in the mild winter climate of the Aegean Sea Greece and western Turkey as well as unusually mild temperatures in the cool or moderately cold winter climates north of the Marmara Sea such as Istanbul Adapazari and Zonguldak Kosava Koshava wind in Serbia that blows along the Danube River 18 19 Nortada in Cascais and most notoriously in Guincho Beach making it one of the best windsurfing spots in Europe Ponenta in Valencia eastern Spain Terral in Malaga southern Spain Viento del Sur Southern Wind or Hego haizea in Basque in the Cantabrian region northern Spain in OceaniaThe Great Dividing foehn in southeast Australia leeward of the Great Dividing Range observed in the coastal plains of New South Wales and also in eastern Victoria and eastern Tasmania 20 The Nor wester in Hawkes Bay Canterbury and Otago New Zealand 21 In popular culture editThe Foehn was mentioned by Queen s lead guitarist Brian May while talking about the band s grim Munich recording studio experience in 1982 22 The foehn is attributed by the narrator of Jens Bjorneboe s 1966 novel Frihetens oyeblikk Moment of Freedom as the traditional cause of occasional unprovoked murders in a small Alpine town 23 Foehn is the last word in A Nest of Ninnies a 1969 novel by John Ashbery and James Schuyler Ashbery claimed that he and Schuyler chose this particular word because people if they bothered to would have to open the dictionary to find out what the last word in the novel meant 24 Fonfjord meaning Foehn Fjord was named by Arctic explorer Carl Ryder after the powerful Foehn wind gusts blowing during the first exploration of the fjord in August 1891 25 Gallery edit nbsp Foehn over Carretera Punta de Jandia in Morro Jable Pajara Fuerteventura Canary Islands nbsp Dissolving clouds from Foehn wind over the Cumbre Nueva in El Paso La Palma Canary Island nbsp Foehn over Llano del Jable nbsp Foehn can be initiated when deep low pressure systems move into Europe drawing moist Mediterranean air over the Alps See also editAlpine climate Anabatic wind Chinook wind Fohn cloud Katabatic winds Lee wave MeteorologyReferences editMcKnight TL amp Hess Darrel 2000 Foehn Chinook Winds In Physical Geography A Landscape Appreciation p 132 Upper Saddle River NJ Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 020263 0 Footnotes edit a b Elvidge Andrew D Renfrew Ian A 14 May 2015 The Causes of Foehn Warming in the Lee of Mountains Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 97 3 455 466 Bibcode 2016BAMS 97 455E doi 10 1175 bams d 14 00194 1 Jones Daniel 2011 Roach Peter Setter Jane Esling John eds Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary 18th ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 15255 6 Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 8118 0 Upton Clive Kretzschmar William A Jr 2017 The Routledge Dictionary of Pronunciation for Current English 2nd ed Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 12566 7 foehn Merriam Webster com Dictionary Retrieved 2022 03 17 South Dakota Weather History and Trivia for January National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office February 8 2006 See January 22 entry Concise Oxford Dictionary 10th edition Oxford University Press entry fohn 22 Januar 2009 Vor 100 Jahren Fon ins Markenregister eingetragen WDR de 2009 01 22 Retrieved 2019 12 21 Der Brockhaus Wetter und Klima Seite 101 Brockhaus Leipzig Mannheim 2009 ISBN 978 3 7653 3381 1 Elvidge Andrew D Renfrew Ian A King John C Orr Andrew Lachlan Cope Tom A January 2016 Foehn warming distributions in nonlinear and linear flow regimes a focus on the Antarctic Peninsula PDF Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 142 695 618 631 Bibcode 2016QJRMS 142 618E doi 10 1002 qj 2489 Giannini AJ Malone DA Piotrowski TA 1986 The serotonin irritation syndrome a new clinical entity The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 47 1 22 25 PMID 2416736 See the documentary Snow Eater the English translation of Canadian First Nations word phonetically pronounced chinook telefilm ca Archived 2013 10 17 at the Wayback Machine Brook K Grumpy nor west winds University of Canterbury 2 December 2014 Retrieved 22 November 2023 a b Tuller Stanton E April 1980 The Effects of a Foehn Wind on Human Thermal Exchange The Canterbury Nor wester New Zealand Geographer 36 1 11 19 doi 10 1111 j 1745 7939 1980 tb01919 x David M Gaffin 2007 Foehn Winds That Produced Large Temperature Differences near the Southern Appalachian Mountains Weather and Forecasting 22 1 145 159 Bibcode 2007WtFor 22 145G CiteSeerX 10 1 1 549 7012 doi 10 1175 WAF970 1 S2CID 120049170 David M Gaffin 2002 Unexpected Warming Induced by Foehn Winds in the Lee of the Smoky Mountains Weather and Forecasting 17 4 907 915 Bibcode 2002WtFor 17 907G doi 10 1175 1520 0434 2002 017 lt 0907 UWIBFW gt 2 0 CO 2 Wind Names ggweather com Romanic et al 2015 Contributing factors to Koshava wind characteristics International Journal of Climatology 36 2 956 973 Bibcode 2016IJCli 36 956R doi 10 1002 joc 4397 S2CID 129669216 Romanic et al 2015 Long term trends of the Koshava wind during the period 1949 2010 International Journal of Climatology 35 3 288 302 Bibcode 2015IJCli 35 288R doi 10 1002 joc 3981 S2CID 129402302 Sharples J J Mills G A McRae R H D Weber R O 2010 Elevated fire danger conditions associated with foehn like winds in southeastern Australia Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology Relph D The Canterbury nor wester New Zealand Geographic Retrieved 17 February 2018 Brian News brianmay com September 2012 Bjorneboe Jens 1966 Frihetens oyeblikk in Norwegian Oslo Gyldendal Norsk Forlag pp 32 33 180 185 ISBN 8205234841 John Ashbery 1983 The Art of Poetry No 33 theparisreview org Vol Winter 1983 no 90 Place names northern East Greenland data geus dk External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Foehn wind nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Fohn Photo of Fohnmauer The strong clouds at the mountain ridges where the Fohn winds form are called Fohnmauer Fohn wall Illustration Movie of a Fohn situation in the Swiss Alps East Scotland warmth due to Foehn Effect Foehn chart provided by meteomedia meteocentrale ch Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Foehn wind amp oldid 1195826558, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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