China Naming Network - Baby naming - Urgently ask for meteorological data of Suzhou city
Urgently ask for meteorological data of Suzhou city
Suzhou is located in temperate zone, with four distinct seasons, mild climate and abundant rainfall. It belongs to the north subtropical monsoon climate, with annual average precipitation 1 100 mm, annual average temperature 15.7℃ and 1 monthly average temperature of 2.5℃. The average temperature in July is 28 degrees Celsius. The city is low-lying, with plains accounting for 55% of the total area, dense water networks, fertile land and rich products. Ye Ping is rich in Daoxiang and Bibo, and its agricultural and sideline products are very rich. People's poems "Know the red lotus beside the fragrant rice", "Peach blossoms and flowing water are rich in mandarin fish fat" and "Buy ling in the night market and carry it on a boat in spring" are all praises for Suzhou's rich products. Mainly planting rice, wheat and rape, producing cotton, sericulture and fruit. The specialties are Biluochun tea, Yangtze river swordfish, Taihu whitebait and Yangcheng Lake hairy crab. Suzhou is a famous "land of plenty" and "land of silk". Suzhou belongs to two provincial-level natural geographical regions: the delta plain along the Yangtze River and the Taihu Plain, and four secondary natural regions: the sandbar area along the Yangtze River, the Suzhou-Wuxi-Changzhou Plain, the Taihu Lake and the lakeside hilly area, and the Yangcheng-Dianmao lowland. The terrain is characterized by gentle plains. The whole city is low and flat, and it slopes slowly from west to east. The plain is 3-4 meters above sea level, and the area around Yangcheng Lake and Wujiang River is only about 2 meters. Low mountains and hills are scattered all over the country, generally 100 ~ 350m high, distributed in the western mountainous areas and Taihu islands, among which Dome Mountain is the highest (342m), including Nanyang Mountain (338m), Fog Peak of West Dongting Mountain (336m), Moli Peak of East Dongting Mountain (293m) and Qizi Mountain (294m). /view/2239.htm#3