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The great uniformity of Eastern Europe, in respect
to its morphology, we find repeated in its climatic conditions.
But, to the same extent that the attentive investigator,
upon close observation, finds several independent mor-
phological individualities within the Eastern European
low country, he will also observe important climatic
differences in this great half-continent.
The Central European climatic zone stops at the
western borders of the Ukraine. Similarly, the cool Eastern
European continental climate, which rules over all of
White and Great Russia, embraces only insignificant
borderlands in the north of Ukrainian territory. The
Ukrainian climate assumes an entirely independent posi-
tion. It is more continental than that of Central Europe
and differs from that of Great Russia in its greater mildness.
The Ukraine shares with France the advantage that in its
territory the direct transition from the temperate climate
of Eastern Europe to the Mediterranean climate of Southern
Europe takes place.
The thermal conditions of the Ukraine, despite its
great size, are very uniform. The yearly averages fluctuate
between +6° and +9° C. Ternopil, in Podolia, and Vov-
chansk, in the Kharkov country, have the same yearly
temperature of +6.3°, Pinsk +6.7°, Kiev and Kharkiv
+6.8°, Lviv (Lemberg) and Poltava +6.9°. The differences
are confined within a space of 1° C. Chernivtzi (Czernowitz)
in the Bukowina, Yelisavet in the Kherson region, and
Luhan in the Donetz region have an annual temperature
of 7.6° or 7.7°, Katerinoslav on the Dnieper, Tahanroh
on the Sea of Azof, and Stavropil in the sub-Caucasus
country 8.3° or 8.2°. This great coincidence of yearly
averages in so widely separated places is all the more
surprising, since the mean temperature falls considerably
directly behind the borders of the Ukraine. Thus, Kursk
has only +5.2°, Voroniz +5.4°.
Not until we reach the southern borders of the Ukraine
does the mean temperature rise considerably. Odessa and
Kishinivhave +9.8°, Mikolaiv +9.7°,Simferopil +10.1°,
Sevastopil +12.2°, Katerinodar +12.1°, Novorossiysk +12°,
Yalta +13.4° mean annual temperature. The last-named
place actually lies in the narrow belt of the Mediterranean
climate, on the southern slope of the Yaila Mountains.
Comparing the annual averages of the Ukraine with
those of different places in Western and Central Europe,
the latter appear relatively much higher. London,
situated in the same geographical latitude as Kursk has
an annual temperature almost twice as high (+10.3°).
London is on the average even a little warmer than Sim-
feropil, which actually lies 650 km. nearer the equator.
Brussels lies a little more north than Kiev, yet it is in the
mean warmer than Odessa.
The cause of this unfavorable relation is the severe
winter of the Ukraine. The mean temperature of January
is +3.5° in London, +2° in Brussels, +1.2° in Frankfort
a m., 1.2° in Prague, 3.3° in Cracow. In the Ukraine
the January means are much lower. Lemberg has 4.6°,
Kiev has 6.2°, Kharkiv 8.3°, Luhan 8°, Vovchansk
7.7°, Katerinoslav 7.4°, etc. To be sure this is not re-
markable when compared with the January temperatures of
even the south of Great Russia, where the winter suggests
polar conditions, but the antithesis to the winter climate
of Western and Central Europe is striking. Hammerfest,
the northernmost city of the. earth, is one degree warmer
than Kiev in January and even a little warmer than
Lemberg.
On the other hand, the summer of the Ukraine is even
warmer than that of Western and Central Europe. The
July mean of London is +17.9° C.,of Brussels 18°, Lemberg
the same, but Kiev has as much as 19.2°, Kharkiv 20.9°.
The differences in the summer temperatures are much
smaller, however, than the differences in the winter tem-
peratures hence the comparatively low annual mean in
the Ukraine.
These figures clearly show the continental character of
the Ukrainian climate. The influences of the Atlantic Ocean,
which still strongly dominate the climate of Central
Europe, become slight in the Ukraine. Particularly, the
southern part of the Ukraine is almost unaffected by the
mitigating influence of a nearby ocean, and the necessary
result is the low winter-temperatures. But the continental
character of the Ukrainian climate is, nevertheless, not so
strongly marked as that of the Russian or Siberian climate.
Kamishin, Semipalatinsk, Blagovieshchensk, situated on
the same degree of latitude as Kiev, have a January mean
of 11.6°, 17.5° and 25.4°, and a July mean of +24.1°,
+22.2° and +21.3°, respectively. The influences of the
Black Sea, altho in general not great, are at least unmis-
takable in the coastal region of the Ukraine.
The difference between the mean of the coldest and
that of the warmest month is slighter in the Ukraine than
in Russia or Siberia, to be sure, but it is, at any rate,
considerable. Only in the Mediterranean climate of
Southern Crimea does the difference amount to as little
as 20°. The rest of Crimea, the sub-Caucasian country
and the northwestern part of the Ukraine as far as Kiev
and Uman have a difference of 20° 25°, Lemberg, for
example, 22.6°, Pinsk 24°, Chernivtzi 25.1°, Kiev 25.2°.
On the other hand, the southern and the entire eastern
part of the Ukraine, especially east of the Dnieper, shows
a considerable difference, from 25° to 30°, as for example,
Kiev 25.4°, Odessa and Mikolaiv 26.3°, Poltava 27.3°,
Kharkiv and Tahanroh over 29°, Luhan and Katerinoslav
30.4°.
The winter appears severe in the entire Ukraine, with
the exception of Crimea and the sub-Caucasian country.
The January mean temperature of 4° to 8° then
obtains in the entire wide territory. Lemberg has 4.3°,
Tarnopol 5.5°, Chernivtzi 5.1°, Kiev 6.2°, Vovchansk
7.7°, Katerinoslav 7.4°, Mikolaiv 4.3°, Tahanroh
6.7°, Luhan 8°. Even the southern lands of the Ukraine
have a low mean for January, for example, Odessa 3.7°
(Kishiniv 3.5°), while Kamenetz owes its exceptionally
high mean, 3.3°, to its sheltered location in a "yar."
The January isotherms run from northwest to southeast
in Ukrainian territory, in a wide curve, which becomes
increasingly flat toward the southeast. For this reason
the cold in the Ukraine grows in intensity not in a northern
but in a northeastern direction. The mean annual mini-
mum almost everywhere exceeds 20° (Lemberg 19.2°,
Chernivtzi 2 1.1°, Tarnopol 23.4°, Kiev 23.2°, Mikolaiv
21.4°, Luhan 28.4°). The absolute extremes attain
very high values. The absolute minimum amounts to
30° in Mikolaiv and Odessa, 33.1° in Kiev, 34° in
Ternopil, 35° in Lemberg and Czernowitz, 40.8° in
Luhan.
The Ukrainian winter is far less variable than the
Central European or even the Russian. Only in the north-
western borderlands of the Ukraine does a thaw, brought
by the Atlantic winds, frequently appear. The duration of
the frost on the Pontian shore is at most two months,
in the Pontian steppe-plain and the southern spurs of the
plateau groups three months, in all the rest of the Ukraine
three and a half. Only in the northeastern borderlands
of the Ukraine, located on the spurs of the Central Russian
elevation and the Donetz, does the frost period extend over
four months.
In Southern Ukraine the winter is followed directly by a
sunny spring, with dry east winds, which partly degenerate
into sand-storms (sukhovi). Everywhere else in the
Ukraine wet, sloppy weather follows the steps of the receding
winter. Toward the northwest it continues longer and
longer. The sloppy weather of spring consists of a con-
stantly varying succession of frost, thaw, snowstorm, rain
and sunshine, ending in the southern part of the Ukraine
usually in the middle of April, in the northern and north-
western part at the end of April or even at the beginning
of May. The actual spring following thereon is very short
thruout the Ukraine and usually lasts three weeks, except
in the northwest, where it continues thru the entire month
of May. The mean April temperature is everywhere
higher than the annual mean (Lemberg +7.8°, Tarnopol
and Kiev +6.9°, Czernowitz and Odessa +8.6°, Luhan
8.1°). But the month of May is quite as warm as July in
England. On the other hand, we find' May frosts in the
entire Ukraine as far as the shores of the Black Sea, altho
they do not appear so destructive here as in Russia proper.
The Ukrainian summer is everywhere marked by
considerable heat. Only in the northwest corner of the
Ukraine (Rostoche, Pidlassye, Polissye, Volhynia) is the
summer moderately warm (Lemberg +19.1°, Ternopil
+ 18.7°, Pinsk +18°).
The July temperature of all the rest of the Ukraine is
much higher than this. The July isotherm of +20°, like
all the July isotherms of the Ukraine, runs in a northeast
direction past the source of the Sbruch and the mouth of
the Pripet, and the further we advance from this line
towards the southeast, the hotter the summers we find.
On the lower Dniester and Dnieper the mean July tem-
perature exceeds -(-23°. Following are a number of July
means: Czernowitz -)-20.1°, Kiev -{-19.2°, Vovchansk
+20.3°, Odessa +22.6°, Katerinoslav and Mikolaiv +23°,
Luhan -(-22.4°, Tahanroh -(-22.8°. The strongest degrees
of heat are +37° to +43°, and the mean annual maxima
are +30.3° for Ternopil, +31.1° for Lemberg, +32.7° for
Czernowitz, +32.1° for Kiev, +35.2° for Mikolaiv, +35.5°
for Luhan. The duration of the heat period with temper-
atures of +20° and over is two months southeast of a line
which runs near Kishiniv, Poltava and Kharkiv, one
month southeast of the line of Mohiliv, Kaniv and Kursk.
The total duration of the summer is only in the northwest
of the Ukraine as short as three months; otherwise it is
four, and on the Black Sea even four and a half.
The autumn of the Ukraine is regularly very beautiful
and comparatively warm. The month of October has a
mean of temperature higher than the annual (Lemberg
+8.5°, Ternopil +7.7°, Czernowitz +9°, Kiev +7.5°,
Vovchansk +7°, Katerinoslav +9.7°, Luhan +8.4°, Odessa
+ 11°, Mikolaiv +9.7°, Tahanroh +9.1°). But even in
October the warm sunny days are followed by night frosts.
The moist autumnal weather which begins the transition to
winter lasts as much as two months in the northwest;
beyond that, one to one and a half months. The mean
date of the earliest frost is October 19th for Kiev, Octo-
ber 11th for Luhan, October 28th for Micolaiv, and
November 10th for Odessa.
A different position, climatically, is that of Crimea, the
sub-Caucasian country, as well as the mountain islands
of the Carpathians, the Yaila and the Caucasus. In the
temperature conditions of Crimea and the sub-Caucasus
country, the influence of their southerly location and the
proximity of the sea is everywhere apparent. The mean
temperature is everywhere higher than +10° (Simferopol
+ 10.1°, Sevastopol +12. 2°, Katerinodar +12.1°). The
winter is short and comparatively mild (January mean of
Simferopol +0.8°, Sevastopol +1.8°, Katerinodar +2.1°,
Stavropol 4.7°), but very variable. The degrees of frost
are sometimes quite high (Sevastopol 16.9°, Stavropol
25.6° as absolute minima), but the frost period is short
(one to two months). The spring begins in March with full
force; in May follows the five-months' summer. The July
means are very high, especially in the sub-Caucasus
country, the heat period lasting everywhere more than
two months. (July mean of Simferopol -f- 28°, Sevastopol
33.1°, Stavropol +20°, Katerinodar +25.3°). The long
autumn also is very mild.
South of the Yaila and Caucasus Mountains, on the
shore of the Black Sea, lies a narrow strip of land which
actually shows Mediterranean climatic characteristics.
The winter lasts less than a month and is very mild (Jan-
uary mean of Yalta +3.5°, altho the absolute minimum is
13°), and, as in Novorossiysk, cold, bora-like gusts of wind
are common in times of heavy cold. After a long spring
follows a six-months' summer, which passes imperceptibly
into a mild autumn.
The climate of the mountains of the Ukraine has been
but little investigated. In the entire Ukrainian territory
there is not a single meteorological observatory. The
general characteristics of mountain climate, its greater
uniformity, the smaller difference between the warmest
and coldest months, the belated beginning of all the seasons,
etc., may be found in all the mountains of the Ukraine.
Only the climate of the Ukrainian Carpathians is
somewhat better known. The dreariest climate is that of
the Beskyds and the Gorgani. The five-months' winter and
long periods of sloppy weather in the spring and in the
fall encroach upon the short summer. The Chornohora
chain, despite the greater height of its peaks, upon which
the snow in sheltered places remains lying thru the entire
summer, has a much milder and pleasanter climate. The
influence of the warm summer of the adjacent plain regions
limits the duration of the sloppy weather in spring and
autumn. For this reason, the mountain valleys have a
short but very beautiful spring, a warm summer, and a
wonderful mild autumn. The mountain pastures have in
place of the summer only a three months' spring.
In the Yaila Mountains, as a result of their small size
and height, the characteristics of typical mountain climate
are lacking, but in the Caucasus we find them in their
highest development. The analogy to the Alps is perfect,
but the influence of the continental steppe climate of the
surrounding country is unmistakable, expressing itself
in the position of the various climatic regions, in the height
of the snow limit, in the development of the glacial covering,
etc., very distinctly and very differently than in the Alps,
which are surrounded by countries with a climate of a
different kind.
We now come to the second group of climatic phenomena,
pressure and wind conditions. The Ukraine may, in this
respect, be divided into two great regions. The line of
high pressure which separates these parts, called by
Voiekoff the great axis of Europe, extends from the bend
of the Volga, near Tsaritsin, over the porohi section of the
Dnieper at Katerinoslav to Kishinev. North of this line,
west winds prevail, bringing Atlantic air into Northern
Ukraine. In the south, east winds prevail, bearing the
influences of the Asiatic steppe climate. This wind divide
is most distinct in winter. In the northern part of the
Ukraine we find chiefly west and southwest winds, which
mitigate the frosts and cause precipitations of rainfall;
in the southern part dry, cold east winds prevail, increasing
the cold. Sometimes the east wind increases to a snow-
storm (metelitzia, fuga) which whirls up terrible masses of
snow, filling the air with snowflakes until absolutely
nothing can be seen, and causes terrific destruction.
Herds of a thousand head fall victim to its icy breath,
even in the steppes of Crimea, and woe to the traveler who
is caught in a snowstorm in the steppe.
In November and December, in Southern Ukraine,
moist, warm south winds frequently come up from the
Pontus. But the absolute balance is on the side of the
freezing east winds, to which is to be ascribed the severe
winter climate of Southern Ukraine. The northern half
of the Ukraine as a rule, is seldom reached by the east
winds, the northwestern corner very seldom. Their
occasional appearance is accompanied by heavy frosts
with fair weather.
In the spring, east and south winds blow, especially
over Southern Ukraine. They often change to heavy
sand-storms (sukhovi) very harmful to the crops, which
carry clouds of sand, with which they form miniature
dunes as high as 30 cm. The east and south winds, at
such times, penetrate even into Northern Ukraine, altho
with the exception of the northwest corner.
In the summer, on the other hand, the west, northwest,
and southwest winds hold a decided balance over the east
winds, even in Southern Ukraine. They bring moist
Atlantic air and rain into the entire land and mitigate the
heat. The occasional east winds increase the heat and
bring periods of drought, but usually not until August,
when they are rather frequent. In September all the
winds are weak thruout the Ukraine, with high pressure.
That is why the fall is so beautiful too. Then, in October
and November, follows the gradual transition to the winter
wind conditions.
The third group of atmospheric phenomena, humidity
and precipitation, possesses the same great uniformity in
Ukrainian territory as the other two elements of the climate.
The humidity of the air in the Ukraine is in general slight.
It is greatest in the forest-covered partly swampy West and
Northwest. Toward the southeast the humidity in the
Ukraine constantly decreases. Fogs appear seldom and are
only light, so that the antithesis to Western and Central
Europe, as well as Russia, is striking. The light night and
morning fogs which appear, especially in the latter part of
summer and in the fall, only contribute to the beautification
of the landscape, by flooding the depressions of land like a
sea. Cloud-formation is much slighter in the Ukraine
than in Western or Central Europe, or in Russia proper,
the dreary Muscovite country. The greatest number of
clouded days occurs in the western and northwestern
part of the Ukraine; toward the southeast and east the
number of such days dwindles continuously. The least
amount of cloudy weather occurs in the month of August.
In September and October the increase is very slight.
November and December are much cloudier and January
is most cloudy all over the Ukraine. After that the cloudy
weather lessens considerably at first, then slowly, until
August.
The atmospheric precipitations in the Ukraine are in
general insignificant, except in the Carpathian and Caucasus
regions. The Ukraine has less rainfall than Central or
Western Europe. The Atlantic Ocean, the most important
source of the precipitations in Europe, lies far distant, and
the cyclonal systems on their way east drop their collected
moisture upon Western and Central Europe. For the
Ukraine, and particularly for the eastern part of it, there
is, therefore, very little left. In this connection the Black
Sea has only a local significance, and the evaporation of
water from the rivers, lakes and swamps, from the plants
and the ground, is hardly worth considering, except as it
happens in the summer.
The great amounts of precipitation are to be found in
the mountains of the Ukraine, where rising currents of
air help along the condensation of the water vapor. Even
in the Low Beskid the precipitation exceeds 1000 mm.
(Yasliska 1170 mm.), in the Gorgani and Chornohora we
find in large areas, especially on the southern slope, a
precipitation of over 1200 mm., in a few places 1400 mm.
(Kobiletzka Polana 1377 mm., Bradula 1419 mm.). The
amount of precipitation is still large in the entire Pidhirye,
but at only a short distance it decreases considerably.
Lemberg has only 735 mm. of rainfall, the southern part
of the Rostoche as much as 900 mm. in places, since the
western edges act like chains of mountains to the west
winds. But Czernowitz, near as it is, has only 619 mm.
and the Podolia on the Dniester still less. The Khotin
lying in the yar of this river has only 300 mm., which best
illustrates the significance of local conditions. At a greater
distance from the curve of the Carpathians the amount
of precipitation shows a slow but regular decrease toward
the southeast. Only in the northern part of the Rostoche
and the northwestern part of Podolia does the amount of
precipitation attain 600 mm., while further toward the
south and east a wide zone stretches out with only 500 600
mm. (Pinsk 581 mm., Kiev 534 mm., Uman 546 mm.,
Poltava 532 mm.). Another wide zone, which extends
from the mouth of the Dniester to the bend of the Don,
has a precipitation of between 400 and 500 mm. (Kharkiv
465 mm., Katerinoslav 475 mm., Kishinev 471 mm.,
Yelisavet 444 mm., Odessa 408 mm.). The next narrow
zone of the Pontian and Crimean steppe has a precipitation
of less than 400 mm. (Mikolaiv 360 mm., Sevastopol 386
mm., Luhan 379 mm.), a corner of Crimea on the peninsula
of Tarkhankut has even barely more than 200 mm.
The Yaila Mountain Range is too small to have any
marked influence on the increase in the amount of precipi-
tation. Yalta has only 508 mm. precipitation. On the
other hand, the influence of the Caucasus is very great.
The sub-Caucasus Kuban region, to be sure, has only
400 500 mm . precipitation , Stavropol 7 20 mm . , N ovorossy sk
691 mm. However, the amount of precipitation on the
southwestern side of the Caucasus Mountains increases
uncommonly. At the borders of Ukrainian territory,
Sochi has not less than 2071 mm.
From this account we see clearly enough that, in com-
parison with Central and Western Europe, the Ukraine is
rather poor in rainfall, especially in the southeast. But the
distribution of the precipitations among the seasons is so
favorable that most of them fall at the time they are most
needed, namely, in the early part of summer. The entire
Ukraine lies within the area of the summer rains, only
the narrow strip of the south coast of Crimea and the
Caucasus are within the area of the winter rains.
The reason of the preponderance of the summer rains
lies in the western and northwestern Atlantic winds, which,
in that season, have easy access far into the southeastern
part of the Ukraine. These winds bring so much moisture
into the Ukraine that almost two-thirds of the annual rain-
fall belongs to May, June and July. The month with the
greatest amount of precipitation for the entire Ukraine
is June. Only the Polissye, Northwestern Volhynia and
the western part of the Kiev territory show the heaviest
precipitation in July, since, in these regions of forests and
swamps, evaporation is heaviest at this time of greatest
heat.
The summer rains of the Ukraine differ from those of
Central or Western Europe in their heaviness. Only in
the Western Ukraine are the summer rains of the type
of gentle rains that are uniform for an entire country; in
the south and east they appear as cloudbursts in heavy
showers. In Samashcani, in Bessarabia, there have been
times when 200 mm. of rain fell in a single day, in Korovintzi
in the Poltava region, 5 mm. in one minute. In the Pontian
steppes all rain falls in the form of heavy showers. The
water flows off quickly and evaporates rapidly, before
it is able to thoroughly saturate the ground..
Electric discharges and hailstorms occur in close
connection with the summer rains, most frequently in
June, less so in July and in May. They usually come from
the southwest in the afternoon hours. Most of these
storms originate in the Carpathian Mountains and reach
Volhynia and Kiev, but do not cross the Dnieper. The
Caucasus, too, has very many storms. Hailstorms are
most frequent in Galicia and Volhynia and the western
part of the Kiev regions; very rare in the southeast.
In August the amount of rainfall slowly decreases; in
September and October still more, and so it continues until
December. January is the month of least rainfall for the
entire Ukraine (only one-fourth of the June figure), and this
circumstance is of particularly great significance for the
southern and eastern parts of the Ukraine. For this
reason the cover of snow in the Ukraine is much less
than in Central Europe or Muscovy, besides which, it is
often disturbed by snowstorms. The slight snow-cover
melts down quickly in the spring, without saturating the
soil well, and without requiring much warmth. This
explains the rapid rise of heat in the Ukrainian spring.
From January until the end of April the amount of
rainfall again grows slowly but steadily, reaching its
maximum in June.
The southern part of Crimea and the Caucasian shore
have just the opposite annual distribution of the precipita-
tions. Under the influence of the moist Pontian winds, the
greatest amount of rain falls in December and January,
while the spring and summer have very little rain. These
characteristics of the Mediterranean climate, the rainy
winter after the dry summer, are all the more striking,
since the opposite condition prevails on the other side of
the Yaila and Caucasus Mountains.
From this account of the Ukrainian climate we see
that this climate retains an entirely independent position
as against that of Central Europe or Russia. The Ukrainian
climate is characterized by an annual amplitude of 20° to
30°, a mean annual temperature of from +6° to +12°, a
July mean of from +19° to +24°, and a January mean of
from 0° to 8°, with predominant summer rains and a
generally insignificant cover of snow. The difference
from the Russian climate is, consequently, quite consider-
able. The Russian climate forms the transition to the
polar, that of the Ukraine to the Mediterranean climate.
Nature has provided the Ukraine with a pleasant, very
wholesome climate. On the whole temperate, it does not lack
heavy frosts and considerable degrees of heat, which
harden the Ukrainian to any inclemencies of the weather.
The differences of the seasons cause a pleasant variety,
strong winds clear the atmosphere and bring motion into
nature, the rains are everywhere sufficient for the growth
of vegetation and the carrying on of the most important
occupation of the Ukraine agriculture. The great
uniformity of this Ukrainian climate has recently caused
the French geographer, de Martonne, to set it up as one
of the types of climate of the globe.
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