Jump to content

Chinook wind: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Line 13: Line 13:
[[Image:Alberta-chinook.gif|right|thumbnail|Where chinooks occur most frequently]]
[[Image:Alberta-chinook.gif|right|thumbnail|Where chinooks occur most frequently]]


Chinooks are most prevalent over southern [[Alberta]] in Canada, especially in a belt from [[Pincher Creek, Alberta|Pincher Creek]] and [[Crowsnest Pass, Alberta|Crowsnest Pass]] through [[Lethbridge]], which get 30 to 35 chinook days per year on average. Chinooks become less frequent further south in the United States, and are not as common north of [[Red Deer, Alberta|Red Deer]]. But they can and do occur as far north as [[Grande Prairie]] in northwestern Alberta and [[Fort St. John, British Columbia|Fort St. John]] in northeastern [[British Columbia]], and as far south as [[Albuquerque, New Mexico]].
Chinooks are most prevalent over southern [[Alberta]] in Canada, especially in a belt from [[Pincher Creek, Alberta|Pincher Creek]] and [[Crowsnest Pass, Alberta|Crowsnest Pass]] through [[Lethbridge]], which get 30 to 35 chinook days per year on average. Chinooks become less frequent further south in the United States, and are not as common north of [[Red Deer, Alberta|Red Deer]]. But they can and do occur annually as far north as [[High Level]] in northwestern Alberta and [[Fort St. John, British Columbia|Fort St. John]] in northeastern [[British Columbia]], and as far south as [[Albuquerque, New Mexico]].


In southwestern Alberta, Chinook winds can gust in excess of [[hurricane]] force (120 km/h or 75 mph). On November 19, 1962, an especially powerful chinook in Lethbridge gusted to 171 km/h (107 mph).
In southwestern Alberta, Chinook winds can gust in excess of [[hurricane]] force (120 km/h or 75 mph). On November 19, 1962, an especially powerful chinook in Lethbridge gusted to 171 km/h (107 mph).

Revision as of 00:31, 3 February 2011

Adiabatic warming of downward moving air produces the warm Chinook wind

Chinook winds (Template:Pron-en), often called chinooks, commonly refers to foehn winds[1] in the interior West of North America, where the Canadian Prairies and Great Plains meet various mountain ranges, although the original usage is in reference to wet, warm coastal winds in the Pacific Northwest.[2]

Chinook is claimed by popular mythology to mean "eater" but it is really the name of the people in the region where the usage was first derived. The reference to a wind or weather system, simply "a Chinook", originally meaning a warming wind from the ocean into the interior regions of the Pacific Northwest (the Chinook people lived near the ocean, along the lower Columbia River). A strong Chinook can make snow one foot deep almost vanish in one day. The snow partly melts and partly evaporates in the dry wind. Chinook winds have been observed to raise winter temperature, often from below −20°C (−4°F) to as high as 10°C to 20°C (50°F to 68°F) for a few hours or days, then temperatures plummet to their base levels. The greatest recorded temperature change in 24 hours was caused by Chinook winds on January 15, 1972, in Loma, Montana; the temperature rose from -48°C (-56°F) to 9°C (49°F).

The ch digraph in Chinook is not pronounced as in the word "church" in some regions of the Pacific Coast, but as in French (i.e., shinook) in other regions of the Pacific Coast (e.g., Seattle) and on the prairies. This is because the French-speaking voyageurs of the fur companies brought the term from the mountains.

In Canada

Where chinooks occur most frequently

Chinooks are most prevalent over southern Alberta in Canada, especially in a belt from Pincher Creek and Crowsnest Pass through Lethbridge, which get 30 to 35 chinook days per year on average. Chinooks become less frequent further south in the United States, and are not as common north of Red Deer. But they can and do occur annually as far north as High Level in northwestern Alberta and Fort St. John in northeastern British Columbia, and as far south as Albuquerque, New Mexico.

In southwestern Alberta, Chinook winds can gust in excess of hurricane force (120 km/h or 75 mph). On November 19, 1962, an especially powerful chinook in Lethbridge gusted to 171 km/h (107 mph).

In Pincher Creek, the temperature rose by 41°C (from -19°C to 22°C) in one hour in 1962[3] - trains have been known to be derailed by chinook winds there. During the winter, driving can be treacherous as the wind blows snow across roadways sometimes causing roads to vanish and snowdrifts to pile up higher than 1 metre. Empty semi trucks driving along Highway 3 and other routes in Southern Alberta have been blown over by the high gusts of wind caused by chinooks.

Calgary also gets many chinooks - the Bow Valley in the Canadian Rockies west of the city acts as a natural wind tunnel funneling the chinook winds.

In February 1992, Claresholm, Alberta hit 24°C (75°F) - one of Canada's highest February temperatures.

Chinooks versus the Arctic air mass

The chinook can seem to do battle with the Arctic air mass at times. It is not unheard of for people in Lethbridge to complain of −20°C (−4°F) temperatures while those in Cardston, just 77 kilometers (48 miles) down the road, enjoy 10°C (50°F) temperatures. This clash of temperatures can remain stationary, or move back and forth, in the latter case causing such fluctuations as a warm morning, a bitterly cold afternoon, and a warm evening. A curtain of fog often accompanies the clash between warm to the west and cold to the east.

Chinook arch

One of the most striking features of the chinook is the chinook arch, which is a band of stationary stratus clouds caused by air rippling over the mountains due to orographic lifting. To those unfamiliar with the chinook, the chinook arch may look like a threatening storm cloud at times. However, they rarely produce rain or snow. They can also create stunning sunrises and sunsets.

The stunning colours seen in the chinook arch are quite common. Typically the colours will change throughout the day, starting with yellow, orange, red and pink shades in the morning as the sun comes up, grey shades in the mid day changing to pink/red colours, and then orange/yellow hues just before the sun sets.

Chinook arch in southern Alberta

How chinooks occur

The Chinook is a foehn wind, a rain shadow wind which results from the subsequent adiabatic warming of air which has dropped most of its moisture on windward slopes (orographic lift). As a consequence of the different adiabatic rates of moist and dry air, the air on the leeward slopes becomes warmer than equivalent elevations on the windward slopes.

As moist winds from the Pacific (also called Chinooks) are forced to rise over the mountains, the moisture in the air is condensed and falls out as precipitation, while the air cools at the moist adiabatic rate of 5°C/1000 m (3.5°F/1000 ft). The dried air then descends on the leeward side of the mountains, warming at the dry adiabatic rate of 10°C/1000m (5.5°F/1000 ft).[4]

The turbulence of the high winds also can prevent the normal nocturnal temperature inversion from forming on the lee side of the slope, allowing night-time temperatures to remain elevated.[4]

Quite often when the Pacific Northwest coast is being drenched by rain, the windward side of the Rockies is being hammered by snow (as the air loses its moisture), and the leeward side of the Rockies in Alberta is basking in a foehn chinook. The three different weather conditions are all caused by the same flow of air, hence the confusion over the use of the name "Chinook wind".

Two common cloud patterns seen during this time are:

  • A chinook arch overhead

and/or

  • A bank of clouds (also referred to as a cloud wall) obscuring the mountains to the west. It appears to be an approaching storm, but does not advance any further east.

The Manyberries chinook

Often, a chinook is preceded by a "Manyberries chinook" during the end of a cold spell. This southeast wind (named for the small village Manyberries, now a hamlet, in southeastern Alberta, from where the wind seems to originate) can be fairly strong and cause bitter windchill and blowing snow. The wind will eventually swing around to the southwest and the temperature rises sharply as the real chinook arrives.[citation needed]

The Chinook in the Pacific Northwest

The term Chinook Wind is also used in British Columbia, and is the original usage, being rooted in the lore of coastal tribes and brought to Alberta by the fur-traders.[2][5] Such winds are extremely wet and warm and come from the southwest, and are also known as the Pineapple Express since they are of tropical origin, roughly from the area of Hawaii. The air associated with a west coast Chinook is stable; this minimizes wind gusts and often keeps winds light in sheltered areas. In exposed areas, fresh gales are frequent during a Chinook, but strong gale or storm force winds are uncommon (most of the region's stormy winds come when a fast westerly jet stream lets air masses from temperate and subarctic latitudes clash).

When a Chinook comes in when an Arctic air mass is holding steady over the coast, the tropical dampness brought in suddenly cools, penetrating the frozen air and coming down in volumes of powder snow, sometimes to sea level. Snowfalls and the cold spells that spawned them only last a few days during a Chinook: as the warm Chinooks blow from the southwest they push back east the cold Arctic air. The snow melts quickly and is gone within a week.

The effects on the Interior of B.C. when a Chinook is in effect are the reverse. In a rainy spell, most of the heavy moisture will be soaked out by the ramparts of mountains before the air mass reaches the Canyon and the Thompson River-Okanagan area. The effects are similar to those of an Alberta Chinook, though not to the same extreme, in part because the Okanagan is relatively warmer than the Prairies, and because of the additional number of precipitation-catching mountain ranges in between Kelowna and Calgary. When the Chinook brings snow on the Coast during a period of coastal cold, bright but chilly weather in the Interior will give way to a slushy melting of snow due to the warm spell more than because of rain.

The word is in common usage among local fishermen and people in communities along the British Columbia Coast. The term is also used in the Puget Sound area of Washington. It is important to note that Chinook is not pronounced as it is east of the Cascades – shinook – but is in the original coastal pronunciation tshinook.[6]

An outflow wind is more or less the opposite of BC/Pacific Northwest Chinook. These are called a squamish in certain areas, rooted in the direction of such winds coming down out of Howe Sound, home to the Skwxwu7mesh people, and in Alaska are called a williwaw. They consist of cold air streams from the continental air mass pouring out of the interior plateau via certain river valleys and canyons penetrating the Coast Mountains towards the coast.

Pronunciation in BC and the Pacific Northwest

In British Columbia and parts of the Pacific Northwest, the word Chinook is often pronounced with a tshi-, as in Salish. In Central Washington, Alberta, and the rest of Canada, it is pronounced with a shi-, as in French. This difference may be because it was the Métis employees of the Hudson's Bay Company, who were familiar with the Chinook people and country, brought the name east of the Cascades and Rockies, along with their own ethnified pronunciation. Early records are clear that tshinook was the original pronunciation, before the word's transmission east of the Rockies.[6]

First nations myth of B.C.

Native legend of the Lil'wat subgroup of the St'at'imc tells of a girl named Chinook-Wind, who married Glacier, and moved to his country, which was in the area of today's Birkenhead River.[7][8] She pined for her warm sea-home in the southwest, and sent a message to her people. They came to her in a vision in the form of snowflakes, and told her they were coming to get her. They came in great number and quarrelled with Glacier over her, but they overwhelmed him and she went home with them in the end.

While on the one hand this tale tells a tribal family-relations story, and family/tribal history as well, it also seems to be a parable of a typical weather pattern of a southwesterly wind at first bringing snow, then rain, and also of the melting of a glacier, namely the Place Glacier near Gates Lake at Birken. Thus it also tells of a migration of people to the area, (or a war, depending on how the details of the legend might be read, with Chinook-Wind taking the part of Helen in a First Nations parallel to the Trojan War).

Gardening

The frequent midwinter thaws in Great Plains chinook country are more of a bane than a blessing to gardeners. Plants can be visibly brought out of dormancy by persistent chinook winds, or have their hardiness reduced even if they appear to be remaining dormant. In either case, they become vulnerable to later cold waves. Many plants which do well at Winnipeg (where constant cold maintains dormancy all winter) are difficult in the Alberta chinook belt; examples include basswood, some apple, raspberry and Saskatoon varieties, and Amur maple. Trees in the Chinook affected areas of Alberta are known to be small, with much less growth than trees in areas not affected by Chinooks. This is once again caused by the 'off and on' dormancy throughout winter.

Health

It is said that chinook winds can cause a sharp increase in the number of migraine headaches suffered by the locals and are often called "chinook headaches". At least one study conducted by the department of clinical neurosciences at the University of Calgary supports that belief.[9] It is also popularly believed they can increase irritability and sleeplessness. In mid-winter over major centres such as Calgary, chinooks can often override cold air in the city, trapping the pollutants in the cold air and causing inversion smog. At such times it's possible for it to be cold at street level and much warmer at the tops of the skyscrapers and in higher terrain.[citation needed]

Folklore

There are three especially famous chinook folk tales that most people in southern Alberta probably know in some form from childhood stories.

  • A man rode his horse to church, only to find just the steeple sticking out of the snow. So, he tied his horse to the steeple with the other horses, and went down the snow tunnel to attend services. When everybody emerged from the church, they found that a chinook had melted all of the snow, and their horses were now all dangling from the church steeple.
  • A man was riding his sleigh to town when a chinook overcame him. He kept pace with the wind, and while the horses were running belly deep in snow, the sleigh rails were running in mud up to the buckboard. The cow that was tied behind was kicking up dust.
  • A man and his wife were out during a chinook. The wife was heavily dressed and the man was wearing summer clothes. When the couple had returned home, the man had frostbite, and the woman had heatstroke.

Records

Loma, Montana boasts as having the most extreme recorded temperature change in a 24-hour period. On January 15, 1972, the temperature rose from −54 °F (-48 °C) to 49 °F (9 °C), a 103 °F (57 °C) change in temperature; a dramatic example of the regional Chinook wind in action.

The Black Hills of South Dakota are home to the world's fastest recorded rise in temperature. On January 22, 1943, at about 7:30am MST, the temperature in Spearfish, South Dakota was -4 °F (-20 °C). The chinook kicked in, and two minutes later the temperature was +45 °F (7 °C). The 49 degree (27 °C) rise in two minutes set a world record that is still on the books. By 9:00am, the temperature had risen to 54 °F (12 °C). Suddenly, the chinook died down and the temperature tumbled back to -4 °F. The 58 degree drop took only 27 minutes.[10][11]

The aforementioned 107 mph / 171 km/h wind in Alberta and other local wind records west of the 100th meridian on the Great Plains of the United States and Canada, as well as instances of the record high and low temperature for a given day of the year being set on the same date are largely the result of these winds.[citation needed]

On rare occasions chinook winds generated on the eastern slope of the Rocky Mountains have reached or passed the Mississippi River.[citation needed]

Chinook and foehn wind in the United States

The signature chinook arch over a Denver suburb in 2006.

Chinooks are generally called foehn winds by meteorologists and climatologists, and, regardless of name, can occur in most places on the leeward side of a nearby mountain range. They are called "chinook winds" throughout most of western North America, particularly the Rocky Mountain region. Montana in particular has a significant amount of Chinook winds across much of the state during the winter months, but particularly coming off of the Rocky Mountain Front in the north and west-central areas of the state.

One such wind occurs in the Cook Inlet region in Alaska as air moves over the Chugach Mountains between Prince William Sound and Portage Glacier. Anchorage residents often believe that the warm winds which melt snow and leave their streets slushy and muddy are a midwinter gift from Hawaii, following a common mistake that the warm winds come from the same place as the similar winds near the coasts in southern British Columbia, Washington, and Oregon.

Chinooks also occur in Colorado, especially near Denver, where winds blowing over the Rocky Mountain Front Range have raised winter temperatures from below freezing to around 50 °F (10 °C) in just a few hours. There are also Chinook winds in and around other cities in the Rocky Mountain states, including Billings, Salt Lake City and Albuquerque.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Chinook". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2006. .
  2. ^ a b The Indian and the South Wind, p.156, p.157, p.158 in J.A. Costello's Indian History of the Northwest - Siwash, 1909
  3. ^ The Atlas of Canada - Weather
  4. ^ a b Whiteman, C. David (2000). Mountain Meteorology: Fundamentals and Applications. Oxford University Press. ISBN.
  5. ^ The Facts on File Encyclopedia or Word and Phrase Origins, Checkmark Books, New York, 2000
  6. ^ a b Example of tshinook original pronunciation from Comparative vocabularies of the Indian tribes etc. by William Fraser Tolmie, 1884.
  7. ^ Short Portage to Lillooet, Irene Edwards, self-published, Lillooet, various editions
  8. ^ Lillooet Stories, Randy Bouchard and Dorothy Kennedy , Victoria Sound Heritage 6.1. (1977)
  9. ^ Chinooks and Health. Retrieved February 2, 2008.
  10. ^ "South Dakota Weather History and Trivia January". - National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Weather Service.
    —Appendix I: – "Weather Extremes". - National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. - (Adobe Acrobat *.PDF document).
  11. ^ Parker, Watson (1981). - Deadwood: The Golden Years. - Lincoln, Nebraska: The University of Nebraska. - p.158. - ISBN 9780803287020.