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Sunday, October 12, 2008

Santa Ana wind

Santa Ana winds are warm, dry winds that characteristically appear in Southern California weather during late autumn and winter.

Santa Anas are a type of foehn wind, the result of air pressure buildup in the high-altitude Great Basin between the Sierra Nevada and the Rocky Mountains. The air is forced down the mountain slopes of the Transverse Ranges and out towards the western Pacific coast; the air mass is heated by compression as it falls and further heated and dried by a trip through the Mojave Desert before reaching the Los Angeles Basin at typical speeds of 35 knots.

The combination of wind, heat, and dryness is notoriously conducive to wildfires.

A similar phenomenon in the Rocky Mountains is called the Chinook winds.

There is also a band named the Santa Ana Winds.



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