Cold Climate

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Cold Climate

by David@VeritasPrep » Thu Aug 19, 2010 4:51 pm
The Northeast region of the United States has a climate that is unique at the latitude. For example, Burlington, Vermont is at 44 degrees north latitude, the same latitude as Southern France. Southern France has a typical mid-temperate zone climate characterized by warm, dry summers and cool winters with only occasional snowfall. Yet Burlington's climate is similar to that of Anchorage, Alaska and Helsinki, Finland, each or which are located about 1000 miles further north.

Which of the following, if true, best helps to resolve the apparent discrepancy discussed above?

A) The warm waters of the Mediterranean Ocean influence the weather of Southern France, especially the French Riviera.

B) The circulation of air around low pressure centers generally brings cold northern air to the western side of the low pressure.

C) Altitude influences climate as much as does latitude and Burlington, Anchorage, and Helsinki are all less than 200 feet above sea level.

D) The atmospheric jet stream moving across North America is diverted, by the Rocky Mountains, far to the south, bringing cold arctic Canadian air to the northeastern United States year round.

E) The Western region of the contiguous United States has a stable climate dominated by the cold waters of the Pacific Ocean.
Last edited by David@VeritasPrep on Sun Aug 22, 2010 7:29 am, edited 1 time in total.
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by debmalya_dutta » Thu Aug 19, 2010 7:34 pm
My pick is D
A) The warm waters of the Mediterranean Ocean influence the weather of Southern France, especially the French Riviera. - Not correct because we need to establish why temperature of North East region of the US has a unique climate at the altitude
B) The circulation of air around low pressure centers generally brings cold northern air to the western side of the low pressure. Irrelevant. Its doesn't clearly say anything
C) Altitude influences climate as much as does latitude and Burlington, Anchorage, and Helsinki are all less than 200 feet above sea level. Doesn't explain the uniqueness of climate of North East . Only Burlington
D) The atmospheric jet stream moving across North America is diverted, by the Rocky Mountains, far to the south, bringing arctic Canadian air to the northeastern United States. - Correct. This explains how the cold jet impacts the weather in the North East
E) The Western region of the contiguous United States has a stable climate dominated by the cold waters of the Pacific Ocean. - We are talking about the North East region[/quote]
David@VeritasPrep wrote:The Northeast region of the United States has a climate that is unique at the latitude. For example, Burlington, Vermont is at 44 degrees north latitude, the same latitude as Southern France. Southern France has a typical mid-temperate zone climate characterized by warm, dry summers and cool winters with only occasional snowfall. Yet Burlington's climate is similar to that of Anchorage, Alaska and Helsinki, Finland, each or which are located about 1000 miles further north.

Which of the following, if true, best helps to resolve the apparent discrepancy discussed above?

A) The warm waters of the Mediterranean Ocean influence the weather of Southern France, especially the French Riviera.

B) The circulation of air around low pressure centers generally brings cold northern air to the western side of the low pressure.

C) Altitude influences climate as much as does latitude and Burlington, Anchorage, and Helsinki are all less than 200 feet above sea level.

D) The atmospheric jet stream moving across North America is diverted, by the Rocky Mountains, far to the south, bringing arctic Canadian air to the northeastern United States.

E) The Western region of the contiguous United States has a stable climate dominated by the cold waters of the Pacific Ocean.
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by FightWithGMAT » Thu Aug 19, 2010 11:34 pm
David@VeritasPrep wrote:The Northeast region of the United States has a climate that is unique at the latitude. For example, Burlington, Vermont is at 44 degrees north latitude, the same latitude as Southern France. Southern France has a typical mid-temperate zone climate characterized by warm, dry summers and cool winters with only occasional snowfall. Yet Burlington's climate is similar to that of Anchorage, Alaska and Helsinki, Finland, each or which are located about 1000 miles further north.

Which of the following, if true, best helps to resolve the apparent discrepancy discussed above?

A) The warm waters of the Mediterranean Ocean influence the weather of Southern France, especially the French Riviera.

B) The circulation of air around low pressure centers generally brings cold northern air to the western side of the low pressure.

C) Altitude influences climate as much as does latitude and Burlington, Anchorage, and Helsinki are all less than 200 feet above sea level.

D) The atmospheric jet stream moving across North America is diverted, by the Rocky Mountains, far to the south, bringing arctic Canadian air to the northeastern United States.

E) The Western region of the contiguous United States has a stable climate dominated by the cold waters of the Pacific Ocean.
IMO D

D shows that northeastern US climate is unique as it is affected by a factor that is not present around France.

A is close, but France has a normal climate, which is normal for all the places at that latitude. So any factor that tells why France Climate is like that mentioned in the passage would not solve the purpose.

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by bubbliiiiiiii » Fri Aug 20, 2010 12:45 am
FightWithGMAT wrote:
David@VeritasPrep wrote:The Northeast region of the United States has a climate that is unique at the latitude. For example, Burlington, Vermont is at 44 degrees north latitude, the same latitude as Southern France. Southern France has a typical mid-temperate zone climate characterized by warm, dry summers and cool winters with only occasional snowfall. Yet Burlington's climate is similar to that of Anchorage, Alaska and Helsinki, Finland, each or which are located about 1000 miles further north.

Which of the following, if true, best helps to resolve the apparent discrepancy discussed above?

A) The warm waters of the Mediterranean Ocean influence the weather of Southern France, especially the French Riviera.

B) The circulation of air around low pressure centers generally brings cold northern air to the western side of the low pressure.

C) Altitude influences climate as much as does latitude and Burlington, Anchorage, and Helsinki are all less than 200 feet above sea level.

D) The atmospheric jet stream moving across North America is diverted, by the Rocky Mountains, far to the south, bringing arctic Canadian air to the northeastern United States.

E) The Western region of the contiguous United States has a stable climate dominated by the cold waters of the Pacific Ocean.
IMO D

D shows that northeastern US climate is unique as it is affected by a factor that is not present around France.

A is close, but France has a normal climate, which is normal for all the places at that latitude. So any factor that tells why France Climate is like that mentioned in the passage would not solve the purpose.
IMO A.

Guidance please incase, the answer is incorrect.

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by abhigang » Fri Aug 20, 2010 3:03 am
IMO C.

Tha fact states that the climate is unique at the latitude for North eastern region of US.
But the discrepancy shows two regions of US and one from Finland. Hence, IMO there is something else than the latitude which plays a part.

Let me know if I have gone wrong somewhere.

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by David@VeritasPrep » Fri Aug 20, 2010 8:00 am
Nice debate on this one!

OA is D.

The correct answer will resolve the paradox as to how Burlington Vermont could be at the same latitude as the South of France, yet have the climate characteristics of areas 1000 miles further north. As "debmalya_dutta" said the focus is not on the South of France, but rather on Northeast U.S., which is said to be uniquely "northern" for the latitude.

Choice A is incorrect because it tries to explain the reason for the French climate, but the French climate is described as "typical" and so needs no explanation. The climate in Vermont needs to be explained.

Choice B is presumably true of all areas in the northern hemisphere, including France, and does not provide a difference to explain the distinction of the cold Northeastern U.S.

Choice C provides a similarity between Burlington and the two cities with similar climates - Anchorage and Helsinki. However, this similarity does not explain why two cities 1000 miles north of Burlington have the same climate. In fact, by eliminating the possibility that Burlington could have a higher altitude this actually deepens the paradox.

Choice E is irrelevant to the discussion because this choice explains the reason for the climate found in California, Oregon, and Washington, not the climate of the Northeastern U.S.

Choice D is the correct answer because it provides a reason why the Northeastern United States would have a uniquely "northern" climate due to the influx of arctic Canadian air.
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by abhigang » Fri Aug 20, 2010 8:17 am
David@VeritasPrep wrote:Nice debate on this one!

OA is D.

The correct answer will resolve the paradox as to how Burlington Vermont could be at the same latitude as the South of France, yet have the climate characteristics of areas 1000 miles further north. As "debmalya_dutta" said the focus is not on the South of France, but rather on Northeast U.S., which is said to be uniquely "northern" for the latitude.

Choice A is incorrect because it tries to explain the reason for the French climate, but the French climate is described as "typical" and so needs no explanation. The climate in Vermont needs to be explained.

Choice B is presumably true of all areas in the northern hemisphere, including France, and does not provide a difference to explain the distinction of the cold Northeastern U.S.

Choice C provides a similarity between Burlington and the two cities with similar climates - Anchorage and Helsinki. However, this similarity does not explain why two cities 1000 miles north of Burlington have the same climate. In fact, by eliminating the possibility that Burlington could have a higher altitude this actually deepens the paradox.

Choice E is irrelevant to the discussion because this choice explains the reason for the climate found in California, Oregon, and Washington, not the climate of the Northeastern U.S.

Choice D is the correct answer because it provides a reason why the Northeastern United States would have a uniquely "northern" climate due to the influx of arctic Canadian air.
I agree with you David. But only reason behind my selecting C is that the argument talks about a non-American place(Helsinki,Finland) where the uniqueness may/may not apply. If Finland was not there in the argument, I would have gone with D.

Can you please give me the line of reasong which applies to Finland as well.
Thanks in advance.

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by David@VeritasPrep » Fri Aug 20, 2010 9:08 am
Helsinki, Finland was mentioned in order to give an example of a city that is 1000 miles north in latitude from Burlington, yet has the same climate. Helsinki is not unique - it has the appropriate climate for the latitude - and so does not need to be explained. It is like the person with five fingers - not unique - used to show that the person with six fingers is unique.

Hope that helps!
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by kvcpk » Fri Aug 20, 2010 9:49 am
Hi David,

This question has a lot to do with Geography I believe. Though we need not know geography.

I am unable to agree that the answer is D.
The correct answer will resolve the paradox as to how Burlington Vermont could be at the same latitude as the South of France, yet have the climate characteristics of areas 1000 miles further north.

Where does Option D mention anything about climate? It only says that X brings arctic Canadian air to the Northern US.
Now what is "Arctic Canadian Air". It is not mentioned anywhere in the passage.

Maybe this question gives undue advantage to environmental students.

Let me know your thoughts!!
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by jeevan.Gk » Fri Aug 20, 2010 12:54 pm
Those who got this answer wrong need not worry. Definitely real gmat wouldnt consist such questions cos the argument assumes some extent of geography knowledge as a prerequisite.

can you please let us know the source of the question. and also can u clarify KVCPK's doubt

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by David@VeritasPrep » Fri Aug 20, 2010 1:22 pm
Like most questions on this site this is not an official GMAT question there are so few and we have all seen those. This is an original question. I would not post a question that people would have seen before.

I am not sure why you would single this question out as requiring additional knowledge. Perhaps you could suggest a modification of either the stimulus or the answer choice?

As to kvcpx's concern - only in an inference question does the answer choice need to have already been mentioned in the stimulus. For a paradox question the answer choice needs to bring new information. The new information is that the air that is over the northeastern U.S. is air that would normally be located 1000 miles north in Canada, but has been diverted by the rocky mountains so that now it is 1000 miles south - that is why the climate of Burlington is like that of Helsinki. Only to have said it to that extent would have made the answer too obvious.
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by kvcpk » Fri Aug 20, 2010 2:02 pm
David@VeritasPrep wrote:Like most questions on this site this is not an official GMAT question there are so few and we have all seen those. This is an original question. I would not post a question that people would have seen before.

I am not sure why you would single this question out as requiring additional knowledge. Perhaps you could suggest a modification of either the stimulus or the answer choice?

As to kvcpx's concern - only in an inference question does the answer choice need to have already been mentioned in the stimulus. For a paradox question the answer choice needs to bring new information. The new information is that the air that is over the northeastern U.S. is air that would normally be located 1000 miles north in Canada, but has been diverted by the rocky mountains so that now it is 1000 miles south - that is why the climate of Burlington is like that of Helsinki. Only to have said it to that extent would have made the answer too obvious.
Hi David,

I agree with you that the options can bring up new information. I have no concerns regarding the source of this problem.

My concern was whether air flow changes the climate is general Knowledge?

Also, the option introduces a new term Arctic canadian Air. I would have striked out this option as OOS.

I often have this doubt, with such questions General Knowledge Vs OOS information.

Please Let me know your thoughts.
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by David@VeritasPrep » Fri Aug 20, 2010 3:02 pm
You are right ...

I will modify the question thanks to your input. I will make it clear that the air diverted south affects the climate.

That is why official GMAT questions are so good - they are edited hundreds of times!

Thanks very much for the help I hope the question was worthwhile!!

Thanks to Jeevan and the others as well...

David
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by debmalya_dutta » Fri Aug 20, 2010 6:47 pm
Hi kvcpk (pardon the acronym usage coz I do not know your name)

D) The atmospheric jet stream moving across North America is diverted, by the Rocky Mountains, far to the south, bringing arctic Canadian air to the northeastern United States

Leaving aside the geography bit of the option , the way I interpreted the option was
"arctic Canadian air " - air that must be cold because it is from the "arctic" area ... and that helped me in selecting option D.
I see your point though ... yah.... :)
kvcpk wrote:Hi David,

This question has a lot to do with Geography I believe. Though we need not know geography.

I am unable to agree that the answer is D.
The correct answer will resolve the paradox as to how Burlington Vermont could be at the same latitude as the South of France, yet have the climate characteristics of areas 1000 miles further north.

Where does Option D mention anything about climate? It only says that X brings arctic Canadian air to the Northern US.
Now what is "Arctic Canadian Air". It is not mentioned anywhere in the passage.

Maybe this question gives undue advantage to environmental students.

Let me know your thoughts!!
@Deb

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by kvcpk » Fri Aug 20, 2010 11:20 pm
David@VeritasPrep wrote:You are right ...

I will modify the question thanks to your input. I will make it clear that the air diverted south affects the climate.

That is why official GMAT questions are so good - they are edited hundreds of times!

Thanks very much for the help I hope the question was worthwhile!!

Thanks to Jeevan and the others as well...

David
Question was indeed worthwhile David.

Thanks so much for your efforts. Looking forward for some more interesting questions!!
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don't be afraid of failure and don't abandon it.
People who work sincerely are the happiest."
Chanakya quotes (Indian politician, strategist and writer, 350 BC-275BC)