National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration
United States Department of Commerce


 

FY 1983

Marine weather of the inland waters of western Washington

Overland, J.E., and B.A. Walter, Jr.

NOAA Tech. Memo. ERL PMEL-44, NTIS: PB83-207811, 62 pp (1983)


The mid-latitude, west coast marine climate of western Washington is typified in summer by high sea-level pressure as part of the North Pacific weather pattern and in winter by a sequence of storms which originate to the west. Mean and extreme temperatures are moderated by the proximity of the Pacific Ocean and Puget Sound, resulting in a mean temperature of 4°C in January and 17°C in August at Seattle. Local variations in precipitation and wind are influenced by both large-scale weather patterns and the region's topography. Fifty percent of the annual precipitation for most of the inland region falls in the four months from November through February, and less than five percent falls in July and August; the driest region is to the northeast of the Olympic Mountains. Over the inland waters, the winds flow from high to low sea-level pressure in the direction of the local channels. Recent studies by the University of Washington and PMEL on the Puget Sound convergence zone, sea and valley breeze, precipitation patterns and local wind patterns are summarized. The storm which resulted in destruction of the Hood Canal Bridge has shown that the presence of the Olympic Mountains can induce a regional low-pressure system in their lee which can result in strong surface winds over the inland waters.




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