Continentality In South Texas
Is it true that the further away from the
ocean it is, the wider the temperature
range? Hypothesis The theory of
continentality is true. The further away from
the Gulf of Mexico, the higher
the temperature range will be. Background The
theory of continentality is
that the further away from a major ocean, the
greater the temperature range
is. For this project three major cities in South
Texas were chosen;
Galveston, Houston and San Antonio. I chose each of these
cities, because I
am planning to move to San Antonio or Houston after I
graduate. The weather
in that area of the country is very different than it is
here and I thought
it would interesting to find out just a little more about the
climate in that
area. Each are a further distance from the ocean, respectively.
Galveston
is a coastal city. Houston is approximately 30 miles from the ocean
and San
Antonio is about 200 miles from the ocean. I took a road trip there
for
spring break of this year and just by observation, noticed a steady
difference
as I got closer to Galveston. First, San Antonio was very hot and
dry. It
wasn’t extreme weather when I was there, but a typical spring day. As
I got
closer to Houston, it became a little cooler and much more humid. I’m
not
going into humidity at this time, however the closer I got to Houston,
the more
humid it was. When I arrived in Galveston, it was a lot cooler and
even more
humid than Houston. So I determined at that time that
continentality, although I
didn’t know that is what it was called at the
time, was the reason for the
steady difference as I got closer to the ocean.
Data and Methods My hypothesis
was based solely on the week I spent in south
Texas and then on the theory of
continentality. I collected my data from the
United States Weather Pages online.
I graphed monthly high’s and low’s in
degrees Farenheit for each month from
May 1999 to April 2000, in attempts
to get the most recent data. (see Graphs
1-3) Then I subtracted the
January low from the July high for each city. This
gave me the range of
temperature difference. (see Graph 4) It was at this point
that my results
didn’t come out exactly how I had expected. Results and
Conclusions As I
expected, the range from Galveston to Houston went up, however
the range from
Houston to San Antonio went down. This would disprove the theory,
however, I
did notice that if I would have used the August high for San Antonio,
the
results would prove the theory true. There are a few reason this could
have
happened. First, my data could be wrong. I could have made a mistake
when
entering the data. Or two, the data I collected could have been wrong.
Another
reason could have been cloud cover, or general weather differences
because of
long weather trends, such as La Nina. If this study were to be
done further, I
would collect data from more cities. To eliminate the La
Nina/El Nino weather
curves, I would be sure to include several years of
data.