Talk:Monsoon

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The citation is in: "Monsoon enchantment, Seasonal pattern (subsection)" (May 26, 2006). The Hindu. [1].

The northeast monsoon in Tamil Nadu begins typically in kakka - What is "kakka"? Nik42 00:14, 12 Apr 2005 (UTC)

  • I was wondering the same thing... The Finnish word "kakka" means "shit" or "poo", so it might be vandalism. KFP 20:24, 17 May 2005 (UTC)
  • I removed that sentence as I was unable to find any other meaning for "Kakka" than the one above. KFP 15:02, 18 May 2005 (UTC)
Kakka means crow in Tamil. It was obviously a prank Idleguy 17:40, 26 May 2006 (UTC)

Contents

[edit] References needed

This article needs references for the sections on the Asian monsoons. -- Beland 4 July 2005 21:25 (UTC)

In some weeks I will work on de:Monsun (monsoon), de:Enstehung eines Monsuns (basical monsoon dynamics), de:Indischer Monsun (indian monsoon), de:Amerikanischer Monsun (american monsoon phenomena), de:Afrikanischer Monsun (african monsoon/monsoon phenomena), de:Monsunkriterien (monsoon criteria/monsoon definition), de:Monsunwind (monsoon wind), de:Monsunregen (monsoon rain), de:Monsunwald (monsoon forest) and some others. It's not possible for me to translate this huge amount of articles (note: they are today only a base of what will come in future). The main point is there are nearly no basics in the english wikipedia I can build upon. But if you need informations about monsoons: ask me. --Saperaud 00:00, 16 July 2005 (UTC)


I was wondering how long monsoons last for? An hour? 20 minutes? Days?

Thanks.

A monsoon is a seasonal (climatological) phenomenon, so develops and subsides over a period of months with typically one cycle per year. Not to be confused with the individual weather systems that comprise a monsoon. So you could photograph a storm within a monsoon season but not a monsoon itself, which makes the image (or at least the caption) at the head of this article a bit absurd. (Deditos 12:14, 22 February 2006 (UTC))


[edit] Article Improvement Drive

I've nominated this article for improvement, as I feel it has currently not got much beyond a stub and there's potential for it to be a really nice article. The article needs at least an more accurate definition and descriptions of each of the major tropical/sub-tropical monsoons: South-west Asian (Indian), South-east Asian, West African, North American, South American, Australian. I'll be giving it a go, but hopefully others will get on board. (Deditos 12:14, 22 February 2006 (UTC))

Unfortunately, it didn't make the cut. I'll try to do bits and pieces anyhow. Deditos 17:30, 23 March 2006 (UTC)

[edit] 01-VII-2006 edit

I've edited out the bit in the Indian monsoon section talking about children loving it and people going about in raincoats -- it's hardly a provocatively cultural thing that indians wear raincoats and rubber boots and use umbrellas in the rain. I've also changed the tone a little bit and alluded to the Mumbai floods of 2005. --219.91.152.10 03:39, 1 July 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Sources of moisture

I can find no references to the Gulf of Mexico as a source of moisture for the North American Monsoon so I removed that from the article. All of the references I can find refer to moisture coming from the Gulf of California and the Pacific Ocean. Maps show moisture funneled between Baja California and the Sierra Madre Occidental from a source in the tropical eastern Pacific. Some of this moisture may do an "end-around" from the Gulf of Mexico but I can find no mention of it.

http://www.wrh.noaa.gov/fgz/science/monsoon.php?wfo=fgz Fred Bauder 20:57, 5 July 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Rain season vs Rainy season

I know nothing about this stuff, but I notice that Rain season redirects to one article, and Rainy season to another. Is this proper? Should we merge? Cheers. PizzaMargherita 16:39, 23 July 2006 (UTC)