Urban Microclimates (AQA A Level Geography)

Revision Note

Microclimate & Urban Form

  • Cities create their own microclimate domes and have unique:

    • Temperature ranges

    • Wind patterns

    • Clouds and precipitation rates

    • Pollution

  • Urban microclimates vary according to urban areas’ size, shape and location

  • There are a number of causes, some of which are:

    • Changes to land surface; concrete, brick and tarmac

    • Cities have fewer trees than surrounding rural areas. Trees shade the ground, preventing heat from the Sun being absorbed 

    • Dark rooftops and dark pavement absorb more solar radiation 

    • Tall buildings reflect and absorb sunlight  

    • Cars engines and factory exhaust produce heat

    • Fewer plants in urban settings mean that less evapo-transpiration occurs, a process that cools the air

    • Poor building insulation means release of heat at night

  • Within these microclimate domes, there are two levels:

    • Urban canopy - processes act in the spaces between buildings below roof level

    • Urban boundary - processes acting above roof level and extends downwind as a plume into the surrounding rural areas

  • Patterns of precipitation and air quality are extended to immediate areas via the prevailing winds

Characteristics of Urban Microclimate

microclimate-dome
Image showing the pathway of the urban microclimate dome
  • Urban climates show the following characteristics:

    • 2-3 weeks fewer frosts

    • Pollution levels are higher

    • Fog and photochemical smog is likely

    • 5-15% more precipitation 

    • Lower relative humidity

    • 5-10% more cloud

    • Increased thunderstorms

    • Lower wind speeds, with exception of tunnelling effect

    • Pressure gradients

    • Greater diurnal temperature range - higher max and min temperatures as compared to rural areas 

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