How To Read Weather Map PDF
How To Read Weather Map PDF
BOOK OF WEATHER
APRIL 5. 2009
Warm front
Because warm air is a higher
temperature and less dense than
cooler air, warm fronts are pushed
up as they move into a region. As it
goes higher, moisture condenses
into cloud and rain, although it often
clears quickly. The warm front is
marked as a line with semicircles
pointing in the direction it is heading.
How to read
the weather
map
It might look like a tangle of lines, circles and arrows
but unlocking the mysteries of the standard weather
map is quite easy. Heres what the key symbols mean:
Low pressure
A region on the map, indicated with
an L, where the atmospheric pressure
is lower than the surrounding area,
usually caused by moist warmer air
being forced up.The air in a low spins
clockwise and often creates cloudy and
unstable conditions, which if spun into
a tight pattern with decreasing surface
pressure, can become a cyclone.
Rainfall
Is shown on the weather map as an
area of shading and represents
widespread rainfall recorded in that
area in the preceding 12 hours. Colour
coded maps showing current and
past rainfall totals across the state
and nation are available on various
Bureau of Meteorology webpages.
Isobars
High pressure
H
x
1019
Wind symbols
Dots are placed on the weather map
to indicate calm conditions. Wind
is recorded as small lines, with an
increasing number of ticks on the end
of each line to indicate a stronger wind
speed. The lines are angled according
to wind direction. Isobars grouped
closely together also can indicate
windy conditions.
Cold front
Occurs when a mass of cold air
moves into a region and undercuts an
area of warmer air. The temperature
differences across a cold front can
be extreme. The air is often unstable,
windy and can create storms. A cold
front is marked on the weather map
as a line with barbs pointing in the
direction of its movement.
The BoM
radar
History
repeats