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5.2: Classroom Activity

  • Page ID
    46374
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    Sun Angle Analysis for Tikal Using NOAA Solar Calculator

    1. Use Google Earth to explore the land area near the city center of Tikal, Guatemala. Locate the Corriental reservoir. Record the latitude and longitude of Tikal.
    2. Open NOAA Solar Calculator. Use NOAA Solar Calculator to determine Tikal's sun angle for the following dates:
    Table of seasonal sun angles.
    Season Date Sun angle Intensity of solar energy delivered
    Spring equinox March 21    
    Summer solstice June 21    
    Autumn equinox September 21    
    Winter solstice December 21    
    1. Note that Tikal's latitude is between the Equator and the Tropic of Cancer.
      1. For how many times in a year does Tikal have direct sunlight (i.e., 90 degree sun angle)?
      2. What are the date(s) when Tikal has direct sunlight? (Use the NOAA Solar Calculator to determine this.)
      3. Consider the seasons around the times of direct sunlight at Tikal and the seasonal shifting of the location of subtropical low pressure belt, explain why Tikal's rainfalls are concentrated in spring and summer.
    2. How does the seasonal variation of solar energy delivered explain the seasonal variation of rainfalls at Tikal?
    3. Variation in sun angle also affect the wet/dry conditions at other latitudes in the Americas.
      1. For how many times in a year does Chicago have direct sunlight?
      2. Why does variation in sun angle affect much less the resource of water in North and South America compared to Central America?
        1. Discuss this question by considering the size of the continent and drainage basins, and how rivers and groundwater are dependent on continental sizes.
        2. Use Chicago as an example, explain why seasons do not affect water availability in North America.

    This page titled 5.2: Classroom Activity is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Likwan Cheng.