I have two main questions:
- Does what I have already done look correct?
- I’m stuck in the areas where no climate is marked yet — what climates should go there?
I forgot to mention it, but the equator is actually marked: there’s a very pale Ɛ drawn at the right-hand side of the map at the equator. I haven’t marked the other parallels though.
Yesbradrn wrote: ↑Tue Jan 14, 2020 5:19 pm Thanks for replying Ars Lande! Your advice looks really helpful, but I’m struggling to figure out which continent each of your ad hoc descriptions refer to though, so could you tell me if this is correct?
‘smallish continent on the center of the map’ — the one east of the island arc joining two continents
The one that is joined by an isthmus to the previous one. (The one that looks like Australia)‘large Western continent’ — not sure, possibly the one with the big N-S mountain chain?
The previous two continents (the ones joined by an isthmus)‘central/western continent’ — no idea what this refers to
Yep.‘Northern continent’ — the continent at the very north, looks squished due to the projection
‘southern continent’ — the continent around the South Pole, has a big promontory north
Thanks for the link. I've been putting off redoing the climates for my conworld (originally done like a decade ago and it was entirely arbitrary re placement) and that guide has been very helpful. One thing about precipitation confuses me though: various factors are given for whether an area gets high or low amounts, but what happens when factors clash, e.g. onshore winds in the STHZ or with cold coastal currents?
Presumably it would have a medium amount of precipitation, but I don’t really know. I think this is the biggest problem with that guide: the table at the end requires you to know precipitation on a scale of very wet/wet/moderate/low/very low/dry, and temperature on a scale of very hot/hot/warm/mild/cool/cold/very cold, but the guide doesn’t actually give enough detail to be able to find these parameters at this granularity!Nila_MadhaVa wrote: ↑Fri Jan 17, 2020 6:03 pmThanks for the link. I've been putting off redoing the climates for my conworld (originally done like a decade ago and it was entirely arbitrary re placement) and that guide has been very helpful. One thing about precipitation confuses me though: various factors are given for whether an area gets high or low amounts, but what happens when factors clash, e.g. onshore winds in the STHZ or with cold coastal currents?
Damn, I hadn't gotten to the temperature section yet.bradrn wrote: ↑Fri Jan 17, 2020 6:31 pm Presumably it would have a medium amount of precipitation, but I don’t really know. I think this is the biggest problem with that guide: the table at the end requires you to know precipitation on a scale of very wet/wet/moderate/low/very low/dry, and temperature on a scale of very hot/hot/warm/mild/cool/cold/very cold, but the guide doesn’t actually give enough detail to be able to find these parameters at this granularity!
Clever! I can’t believe I didn’t think of this. But I’m not sure how realistic this is — it sounds pretty useful as a model, but how do we know that e.g. one factor isn’t 10× more important than any of the others?Nila_MadhaVa wrote: ↑Sat Jan 18, 2020 2:53 amDamn, I hadn't gotten to the temperature section yet.bradrn wrote: ↑Fri Jan 17, 2020 6:31 pm Presumably it would have a medium amount of precipitation, but I don’t really know. I think this is the biggest problem with that guide: the table at the end requires you to know precipitation on a scale of very wet/wet/moderate/low/very low/dry, and temperature on a scale of very hot/hot/warm/mild/cool/cold/very cold, but the guide doesn’t actually give enough detail to be able to find these parameters at this granularity!
I've been thinking about precipitation though, and I came up with this; there are 7 factors each for high and low precipitation. If each high factor is scored as +1 and each low factor at -1, then for a particular area we could say
very wet = 5, 6, 7
wet = 3, 4
moderate = 1, 2
low = 0, -1
very low = -2, -3, -4
dry = -5, -6, -7
Thats the best I could come up with. What do you think?
I am reliably informed that this is because the person who wrote that guide wasn't well enough informed to do any better. Whether anybody is well enough informed is, of course, another matter.bradrn wrote: ↑Fri Jan 17, 2020 6:31 pmI think this is the biggest problem with that guide: the table at the end requires you to know precipitation on a scale of very wet/wet/moderate/low/very low/dry, and temperature on a scale of very hot/hot/warm/mild/cool/cold/very cold, but the guide doesn’t actually give enough detail to be able to find these parameters at this granularity!
You bring up the same points that I wrestled with TBH. I must admit that I couldn't come up with any good answers. Since the writer of the guide notes that there is a good deal of approximation involved in the whole process, I figured it was a decent enough solution. Hopefully one of the members with a bit more knowledge will chime in and enlighten us.
Thanks Nila_MadhaVa! I haven’t read those thoroughly yet, but they look like excellent resources — when I start working on my climates again I’ll definitely use those as well!Nila_MadhaVa wrote: ↑Mon Feb 10, 2020 6:00 am Good to hear you made some progress. I've gotten distracted myself, but not before I found this guide https://imgur.com/gallery/zTR3A/, which, if I'm remembering correctly, has something about the weight of certain factors regarding precipitation. Someone over on alternatehistory.com linked this video a little while back https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5lCbxMZ ... e=youtu.be. If you look in the description, there are links to some other videos that you might find informative.
I'd meant to share them earlier, but I completely forgot until reading your post.