Climate and the Water Cycle
Of all inorganic substances, acting in their own
proper nature, and without assistance or combination, water is the most
wonderful. If we think of it as the source of all the changefulness and
beauty which we have seen in clouds; then as the instrument by which the
earth we have contemplated was modelled into symmetry, and its crags
chiseled into grace; then as, in the form of snow, it robes the
mountains it has made, with that transcendent light which we could not
have conceived if we had not seen; then as it exists in the foam of the
torrentin the iris which spans it, in the morning mist which rises
from it, in the deep crystalline pools which mirror its hanging shore,
in the broad lake and glancing river; finally, in that which is to all
human minds the best emblem of unwearied, unconquerable power, the wild,
various, fantastic, tameless unity of the sea; what shall we compare to
this mighty, this universal element, for glory and for beauty? or how
shall we follow its eternal changefulness of feeling? It is like trying
to paint a soul. Ruskin.
The earth's supply of water is fixedit is used
over and over again. What falls on land as rain or snow, runs off,
evaporates, or sinks into the ground. That which sinks into the ground
may return: (1) to the air, by transpiration from plants and by
evaporation from soil; and (2) to the sea, as ground water either
flowing into streams or directly into the sea. All water falling upon
the land eventually returns to the sea or to lakes from whence it came.
It evaporates and precipitates again and again. This continuous round of
moisture is known as the hydrologic, or water, cycle. It is impressively
demonstrated in the Olympics.
Salt water borders the Olympic Peninsula on three and
a quarter sides. Low land on the south completes the isolation of the
mountains. From atop some mountain peaks one can see the Olympic water
cycle in its entiretyocean, "cloudscape," snowfields, glaciers,
streams from source to mouth returning water to the sea, and forests
transpiring moisture into the air.
A landscape is an expression of climate. The Olympic
landscape, with its rain forests, snowfields, glaciers, lakes, and
numerous streams in deep valleys, is a superb expression of a superhumid
climate. Abundant water is the prime source of Olympic's character. The
prevailing on-shore winds acquire much moisture in passing over the
ocean. The windward slopes of the Olympics cause this nearly saturated
ocean air to rise. Consequently, the western slopes of the Olympic
Mountains receive the greatest precipitation in North America.
Quinault has a mean annual precipitation of 128
inches. For want of records, precipitation at high levels in the Olympic
Mountains can only be guessed or roughly estimated. Based on the flow of
some streams draining the western slopes, it has been calculated that
precipitation on Mount Olympus and neighboring high country may be 250
inches in some years.
Marine climates have greater precipitation in winter
than in summer. Seventy-six percent of the yearly precipitation in
northwest Washington occurs during the 6 months between October 1 and
March 31. There is no definite time for the beginning and ending of the
"dry" and "rainy" seasons, as the transition is gradual and
variable.
The Olympic Peninsula would be well watered even if
there were no mountains. The mountains, however, are responsible for
wringing the bulk of the moisture from the saturated clouds and for
creating local variations in the amount of precipitation. After passing
over the mountains, the air is warmed in descending the leeward slopes.
Consequently, lowland areas on the lee side of the mountains are much
drier than on the windward side. For instance, on the Olympic Peninsula
the mean annual precipitation at Sequim (pronounced Squim) is less than
17 inches, and irrigation is required for successful agriculture.
Another prominent characteristic of the climate is
the mildness of the winters at low elevations. In fact, western
Washington is milder in winter than any other section of the continent
in the same latitude. The reasons for this are the warming influence of
the ocean and the protecting influence of the Cascade Mountains, and
even the Rocky Mountains, against the flow of cold continental air
westward to the coast.
The storm centers that pass eastward across
Washington in winter shift to the north in summer, resulting in a
preponderance of sunny summer weather that is delightfully cool under
the influence of the ocean.
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