Weather front

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A guide to the symbols for weather fronts that may be found on a weather map.

In meteorology, a weather front is a boundary between two air masses with differing characteristics (e.g., air temperature or humidity).

When a weather front passes over an area, it is marked by changes in temperature, wind speed and direction, atmospheric pressure, and often a change in the precipitation pattern.

Weather fronts are often closely associated with atmospheric pressure systems. They are generally guided by the jet stream and travel from west to east. This movement is due to the Coriolis effect, caused by the Earth spinning about its axis. Weather fronts can also be affected by geographic features like mountains and large bodies of water, especially at the lower levels of the atmosphere.

There are four main types of weather fronts:

A sea breeze is a form of a localized cold front.

A similar phenomenon is a dry line, which is the boundary between wet and dry air. The best-known dry line is the one that forms near the Gulf of Mexico. When a dry line passes an area, there is an associated decrease in humidity. The phenomenon is also associated with much of the instability that occurs in the Great Plains that tends to lead to powerful storms.

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See also: Weather front, Air mass, Atmospheric pressure, Cloud, Coriolis effect, Dry line, Earth, Earth's atmosphere, Gulf of Mexico, Humidity