(Print) Use this randomly generated list as your call list when playing the game. There is no need to say the BINGO column name. Place some kind of mark (like an X, a checkmark, a dot, tally mark, etc) on each cell as you announce it, to keep track. You can also cut out each item, place them in a bag and pull words from the bag.
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Trade winds
Stationary Front- two air masses meet and stop moving
Doldrums
Trade Winds- winds that blow toward the equator from 30 North and South latitude
Wind Vane
Occluded Front- forms when a warm air mass is caught between two colder air masses, one of which overtakes the other
Exosphere
Air Pressure- weight of air pressing at a given location
NWS
Temperature- measures how fast air molecules are moving ( higher temps- move faster; lower temps- move slower)
Polar Easterlies- extend from the poles to 60 latitude, bring cold arctic air down over the United States, bring snow and freezing weather
Cold Front
Relative humidity
Precipitation
Air Pressure
Doppler Radar
Coriolis Effect- rotation or spinning of Earth on its axis plays a role in wind patterns because of this, weather tends to move in a circular path
Humidity- amount of water vapor in the air (damp/sticky)
Jet Streams- high in the atmosphere, flowing from west to east
Warm Front- warm, moist air mass slides up and over a cold air mass
Doppler Radar- gathers data by sending out radio signals that are reflected off objects, detects and tracks precipitation, clouds, wind speed and direction, and storms
Gulf Stream- warm sea surface temperatures aid in the forming and strengthening of the hurricanes that move through the Gulf of Mexico
Polar easterlies
Precipitation- water that falls to the earth
Westerlies
Wind Vane- shows wind direction
Humidity
Coriolis effect
Cold Front- cold air mass pushes under a warm air mass, forcing the warm air to rise sharply
Westerlies- winds that flow from west to east and toward the poles, between the polar easterlies and the trade winds, carries storms across the United States
Mesosphere
NWS- National Weather Service; network of weather stations located throughout the country that gathers weather information and sends it to central location
Stationary Front
Jet Streams
Hygrometer- instrument used to measure the water vapor
Ionosphere- location of radio communication; auroras ("Northern Lights")
Temperature
Exosphere- movement of satellites and space crafts
Doldrums-located at equator, little to no wind
Mesosphere- strong winds; traces of meteor gas
Warm Front
Dew Point- measure of the temperature at which more water vapor will condense onto a surface than will evaporate from it
Relative Humidity- compares the amount of water vapor in the air to the amount of water vapor that air can hold at a given temperature