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[pct-l] katabatic air
If this has been better defined, sorry for the repeat. I skim most
posts... Imagine a river of cold air originating over a snowfield or
glacier moving ponderously down the outlet creek valley. The river is
anywhere from 10' to 30' deep. It flows very slowly, less than a mile
an hour in most cases. It can be 10 degrees colder than the air just
outside its flow. The lesson - don't camp at the bottom of a defile or
next to a creek.
Jeff Olson
Laramie WY
Saskia Daru wrote:
>I read in an old Backpacker that there is a so-called cold zone, or
>katabatic zone. When camping, the article said, you should neither camp in
>the absolute bottom of a valley, nor at the top of a ridge. In the valley
>there is cold air that is somehow trapped and will keep cold throughout the
>night and the morning.
>
>At least, that's what I remember from the word katabatic (or is it
>catabatic?)
>
>Saskia
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