Manabe, S., and A. J. Broccoli, 1990: Mountains and arid climates
of middle latitudes. Science, 247, 192-195.
Abstract: Simulations from a global climate model with and without
orography have been used to investigate the role of mountains in maintaining
extensive arid climates in middle latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere.
Dry climates similar to those observed were simulated over central Asia
and western interior North America in the experiment with mountains, whereas
relatively moist climates were simulated in these areas in the absence
of orography. The experiments suggest that these interior regions are dry
because general subsidence and relatively infrequent storm development
occur upstream of orographically induced stationary wave troughs. Downstream
of these troughs, precipitation-bearing storms develop frequently in association
with strong jet streams. In contrast, both atmospheric circulation and
precipitation were more zonally symmetric in the experiment without mountains.
In addition, orography reduces the moisture transport into the continental
interiors from nearby oceanic sources. The relative soil wetness of these
regions in the experiment without mountains is consistent with paleoclimatic
evidence of less aridity during the late Tertiary, before substantial uplift
of the Rocky Mountains and Tibetan Plateau is believed to have occurred.