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Difference between revisions of "40d Talk:Climate"
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I have a map in a freezing biome, but the water still thaws for ca 2 months during summer. The map area overlaps a cold area as well, which thaws for the whole summer and a bit more. Might it be that forest/grassland freezing is different from a tundra/glacier freezing? Or perhaps the overlapping different temperatures are the cause? I haven't got much experience with these starting points since they're a bit rare and I usually prefer a mountainous area, which seems to act a bit differently too. Any ideas? [[User:Noctis|Noctis]] 15:29, 14 January 2008 (EST) | I have a map in a freezing biome, but the water still thaws for ca 2 months during summer. The map area overlaps a cold area as well, which thaws for the whole summer and a bit more. Might it be that forest/grassland freezing is different from a tundra/glacier freezing? Or perhaps the overlapping different temperatures are the cause? I haven't got much experience with these starting points since they're a bit rare and I usually prefer a mountainous area, which seems to act a bit differently too. Any ideas? [[User:Noctis|Noctis]] 15:29, 14 January 2008 (EST) | ||
:I think, that the freezing, cold etc are fuzzy constants, and so, they give you only general insights on weather changes--[[User:Dorten|Dorten]] 23:13, 14 January 2008 (EST) | :I think, that the freezing, cold etc are fuzzy constants, and so, they give you only general insights on weather changes--[[User:Dorten|Dorten]] 23:13, 14 January 2008 (EST) | ||
+ | ::the local biomes certainly help, for instance my biome has an area NE of it where the grass is dry and all the pools have evap'd, and 'outside' the fort the pools were full (my dwarves get their vitamin d intake, was building a dwarven washington DC complete with white house ripoff when new version came out) --[[User:Frostedfire|Frostedfire]] 07:08, 13 February 2008 (EST) |
Revision as of 12:08, 13 February 2008
I have a map in a freezing biome, but the water still thaws for ca 2 months during summer. The map area overlaps a cold area as well, which thaws for the whole summer and a bit more. Might it be that forest/grassland freezing is different from a tundra/glacier freezing? Or perhaps the overlapping different temperatures are the cause? I haven't got much experience with these starting points since they're a bit rare and I usually prefer a mountainous area, which seems to act a bit differently too. Any ideas? Noctis 15:29, 14 January 2008 (EST)
- I think, that the freezing, cold etc are fuzzy constants, and so, they give you only general insights on weather changes--Dorten 23:13, 14 January 2008 (EST)
- the local biomes certainly help, for instance my biome has an area NE of it where the grass is dry and all the pools have evap'd, and 'outside' the fort the pools were full (my dwarves get their vitamin d intake, was building a dwarven washington DC complete with white house ripoff when new version came out) --Frostedfire 07:08, 13 February 2008 (EST)