谁有悉尼的风俗,食物,天气等介绍的英文版啊?可以的话,希望有悉尼,大堡礁,艾尔斯岩石这3个地方的都要以悉尼为主,要风俗,食物,天气相关的介绍要英文的啊!
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谁有悉尼的风俗,食物,天气等介绍的英文版啊?可以的话,希望有悉尼,大堡礁,艾尔斯岩石这3个地方的都要以悉尼为主,要风俗,食物,天气相关的介绍要英文的啊!
谁有悉尼的风俗,食物,天气等介绍的英文版啊?
可以的话,希望有悉尼,大堡礁,艾尔斯岩石
这3个地方的都要
以悉尼为主,要风俗,食物,天气相关的介绍
要英文的啊!
谁有悉尼的风俗,食物,天气等介绍的英文版啊?可以的话,希望有悉尼,大堡礁,艾尔斯岩石这3个地方的都要以悉尼为主,要风俗,食物,天气相关的介绍要英文的啊!
Climate
Further information: Climate of Sydney, New South Wales
Sydney has a temperate climate with warm summers and cool winters, and rainfall spread throughout the year.[29][30][31][32] The weather is moderated by proximity to the ocean, and more extreme temperatures are recorded in the inland western suburbs. The warmest month is January, with an average air temperature range at Observatory Hill of 18.6-25.8 °C (65.5-78.4 °F). There is an average of 14.6 days a year over 30 °C (86.0 °F). The maximum recorded temperature was 45.3 °C (113.5 °F) on 14 January 1939 at the end of a 4-day heat wave across Australia.[33] The winter is mildly cool, with temperatures rarely dropping below 5 °C (41 °F) in coastal areas. The coldest month is July, with an average range of 8-16.2 °C (46.4-61.2 °F). The lowest recorded minimum at Observatory Hill was 2.1 °C (35.8 °F). Rainfall is fairly evenly divided between summer and winter, but is slightly higher during the first half of the year, when easterly winds dominate. The average annual rainfall, with moderate to low variability, is 1,217 mm (48 in), falling on an average 138 days a year.[34] Snowfall was last reported in the Sydney City area in 1836.[35] However, a July 2008 fall of graupel, or soft hail, mistaken by many for snow, has raised the possibility that the 1836 event was not snow, either.[36]
Bondi Beach in Sydney's east. Sydney's warm weather in summer makes its beaches very popular.The city is not affected by cyclones. The El Niño Southern Oscillation plays an important role in determining Sydney's weather patterns: drought and bushfire on the one hand, and storms and flooding on the other, associated with the opposite phases of the oscillation. Many areas of the city bordering bushland have experienced bushfires, notably in 1994 and 2001–02 — these tend to occur during the spring and summer. The city is also prone to severe hail storms and wind storms. One such storm was the 1999 hailstorm, which severely damaged Sydney's eastern and city suburbs. The storm produced massive hailstones of at least 9 cm (3.5 in) in diameter and resulting in insurance losses of around AUD $1.7 billion in less than five hours.[37] The city is also prone to flash flooding from enormous amounts of rain caused by East Coast Lows (a low pressure depression which deepens off the state usually in winter and early spring which can bring significant damage by heavy rain, cyclonic winds and huge swells). The most notable event was the great Sydney flood which occurred on 6 August 1986 and dumped a record 327.6 mm (12.9 in) on the city in 24 hours. This caused major traffic problems and damage in many parts of the metropolitan area.[38]
The Bureau of Meteorology has reported that 2002 through 2005 were the warmest summers in Sydney since records began in 1859. 2004 had an average daily maximum temperature of 23.39 °C, 2005 - 23.35 °C, 2002 - 22.91 °C and 2003 - 22.65 °C. The average daily maximum between 1859 and 2004 was 21.6 °C (70.9 °F). For the first nine months of 2006 the mean temperature was 18.41 °C (65.1 °F); the warmest year previously was 2004 with 18.51 °C (65.32 °F). Since November 2003, there have been only two months in which the average daily maximum was below average: March 2005 (about 1 °C below average)[39] and June 2006 (0.7 °C below average).[40]
The summer of 2007-08 proved to be one of the coolest on record. The Bureau of Meteorology reported that it was the coolest summer in 11 years, the wettest summer in six years, and one of only three summers in recorded history to lack a maximum temperature above 31 °C (88 °F).[41]
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