- Washoe Zephyr
The Washoe Zephyr is a seasonal
diurnal wind which occurs across westernNevada just east of the Sierra Nevada mountains. It blows primarily in the summer from mid afternoon until late in the evening from the west to southwest, becoming quite gusty. As the terrain is generally arid, the Washoe Zephyr typically lifts a considerable quantity of dust into the atmosphere.The Washoe Zephyr runs contrary to the usual pattern of diurnal mountain slope winds (upslope daytime, downslope nighttime) and thus its exact mechanism is still being studied. One hypothesis is that the wind is caused by intense heating over the Great Basin during summer afternoons. The heating causes a thermal low to develop which sets up a pressure gradient which induces the wind, pulling cooler air down from the High Sierra.
The Washoe Zephyr first gained notoriety from a passage written by
Mark Twain in his book "Roughing It".The wind played a role in a large conflagration which Twain claimed to have accidentally set. This same wind may have played a key role in the conflagration of June 2007 called the
Angora Fire .Fact|date=June 2007 It may also have played a role in the disappearance of millionaire flierSteve Fossett in September 2007. [http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20588788/]References
* [http://ams.confex.com/ams/SantaFe2006/techprogram/paper_114623.htm 12th Conference of Mountain Meteorology, American Meteorological Society]
External links
* [http://www.twainquotes.com/Zephyr.html Twain on the Washoe Zephyr]
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