Marin (wind)

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The Marin is a warm, moist wind in the Gulf of Lion of France, blowing from the southeast or south-southeast onto the coast of Languedoc and Roussillon. It brings rain to this region which it has picked up crossing the Mediterranean, and also can bring coastal fog. The clouds carried by the Marin frequently cause rain on the slopes of the mountains in the interior, the Corbieres, Montagne Noire, and the Cevennes. The wind is usually dried by the foehn effect when it crosses the mountains and descends on the other side. The Marin wind contributes to the creation of another regional wind, the autan. When the Marin blows gently, it creates fine weather for swimming in the gulf, but when the wind is strong it creates heavy swells which strike the coast with high breaking waves.[1]

The Marin is next in frequency and importance to the mistral, the cold, dry northwest wind in Provence. It is caused by low pressure systems which enter the Gulf of Lion from the west or southwest after traversing southern France and northern Spain.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Descriptions of local and regional winds on the Internet site of Meteo-France.

Jean Vialar, Les vents régionaux et locaux, 1948, réédité par Météo-France en 2003

[edit] External links

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