Warming oceans and climate change could continue to affect the complicated weather systems that create our unique Bay Area fog and wind. ![]() The amount of summer fog has decreased 33 percent over the last century, studies have found. The hills and ridges direct the path of the fog and wind, creating these microclimates. Our topography also explains why one neighborhood can be foggy, like the Sunset, and another warm, like the area in Sausalito known as the Banana Belt. "Nothing's going to move them out until the sun comes up the next morning and evaporates it," said Null. That's why we see picturesque summer fog rolling in past the Golden Gate Bridge in the afternoon.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |