Teppala: Difference between revisions

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
 
(8 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Teppala''' or Tebbala is the planet that contains the human population in [[user:Soap|Soap]]'s conworld.  The diversity of spellings (Teppala, Tebbala, Tippala, Tipala, and even more rare ones) is due to the fact that no one language ever reacghed majority status on that planet.
'''Teppala''' or Tebbala is the planet that contains the human population in [[user:Soap|Soap]]'s conworld.  The diversity of spellings (Teppala, Tebbala, Tippala, Tipala, and even more rare ones) is due to the fact that no one language ever reacghed majority status on that planet.


<BIG><BIG>Notes on languages</BIG></BIG>
Even though Teppala is the closest star to its sun (Erasali?), it is slightly colder than Earth.




Becuase my conworld spans more than 20000 years, many of the proper names would change every few paragraphs if I attempted to use the historically accurate name in every occurrenceInstead, I pretend that this is an encyclopedia written in the year 8773 AD on Teppala, mostly written by [[Pabap culture|Pabap]] people, giving "modern" (8773 AD) names to ancient cities and riversSome of the names were historically important in a way that distinguishes them from their modern forms, so in some stories, the older names are preservedThis is similar to how on Earth, many familiar Biblical names are modernized (Jerusalem, Eve, Noah) and others are kept in the original language (Dorcas, Gabbatha, Siloam).
===Global Warming===
Even as recently as 4500 AD, roughly the time of the founding of the major cities of the Wamu Empire, the climate was much colder.  For example, winter in Paba was about 15F colder than presentLypelpyp was 45F colder than present.  Summers in Paba were about the same, but were much shorter and the warmest time of the year was the vernal equinoxSummer in Lypelpyp was even hotter than present ... their winters averaged about -5F and summers about 98F ... thus arly Lypelpyp was a difficult place to liveHowever, it did have more rain than at present.


Most of my writing concerns the period from 633 AD to 4208 AD, with very little description of events in the 4500 years after that except in a few cultural descriptions.  Thus, well over half of the names in my writing are "wrong" because they are in 8773 Pabappa rather than whichever of the many phases would be appropriate for the particular time period being described.  It helps that Pabappa, like most languages on planet Teppala, is fairly conservative, and it was common for a placename to survive 8000 years of sound changes without simply whittling itself down to just a single CV syllable.  However, some names are indeed "replacements" for the original because the original name had been lost over time either through sound changes or through a change of hands in the government. 


Mostly towards the later part of the history (towards 4208 AD, that is), there appear many names in English, mostly for political parties, but some also for people.  This is partly because I don't have enough conlangs to give them all native names, but mostly because I wouldn't expect anyone, not even myself, to keep straight hundreds of foreign names that all look the same, particularly since they change very quickly in the last century before 4208 AD.  Some of the names seem to have little meaning (Tink, Zenith, Matrix, etc) but they are at least consistent.  Other names are related directly to a symbol of that person or political party (the Red Sun, the Soap Bubbles, the Cold Kids, Old Faithful).


Climate of Early Cities
              Warmest    Coldest
                Month      Month
Blop            78          8
Paba            82        37
Lypelpyp        98        -5




==Universal canonicity==
The persistence of cold into fairly recent times is the main reason why pine trees are the dominant type even in the present-day subtropical south coast (areas like Paba).
One rule I've always held to is to never reject any of my ideas at all.  Everything I've written since I was three years old is now and will forever be canonical.  When one idea contradicts another, they are either both true at separate times or one of the names is changed.  Since creating a nation called "Camia" when I was 11 years old, I've had several more Camias, thus explaining how "Camia" can be utterly destroyed by one of its enemies and then a few hundred years later be on the verge of conquering the world.
People, too, can appear multiple times, under different names.  The two powerful female leaders '''Ende''' and '''Joja''' were originally the same person in my writings, even though they lived 300 years apart.  Both of these were originally "Nancy" who was the leader of a club for children in Camia who wanted to [[STW|Save The World]].  A similar person, '''Afunyū''', lived in the 1900s, but I now realize when I wrote that she was Nancy I was using a metaphor.
 
I did not hold to this rule early on.  I just now found a note to myself "Remember, the plots of the book are completely detached from the comics, which gave way to the book in Nov '93."  Neither the book I was writing then nor the comics that precede it are mentioned here however, as they dealt with fine details happening to just a few people whereas my history books deal with large events.  However, a few things do appear in both, such as the firebirds' attack on Sala. 
 
Particularly when I was younger, but even now that I'm in my thirties, I came up with ideas that seemed impossible to reconcile with other ideas later on.  For example, when I was 13 years old, I wrote a story in which two 13-year-old boys in Camia learned that Camia's enemy, Wamia, was going to try to defeat Camia by crashing them into the sun.  Even though Camia and Wamia were on the same planet, Wamia didnt worry about problems because they were fighting a "weather" war, and any increase in temperature, even to absurd levels, would not hurt Wamia.  But when the two 13-year-old boys in STW discovered that Wamia was contemplating whether to "shoot the sun at them" they ended the war by destroying the sun.  Then they fled to planet Nama to ponder whether they had done the right thing. 
 
Since this event is still canonical, I have to find a way to work it into the story.  My conworld no longer has computers or spaceships or interplanetary ballistic missiles, and I like it that way since there is no longer any possible way for one nation to "destroy the universe".  Even with my insistence to keeping absolutely everything, I am willing to move events from one time period to another and thus greatly change the details of what happened so long as the event itself is preserved.  Planets become countries.<ref>I have kept one planet as a planet, though, ''Imama-Hamapaa'', because I believed that that planet and its landforms appeared large enough in the sky to let the humans living on Teppala know that other planets existed.  However, Ive just now realized that the term ''sister planet'' doesnt mean what I thought, and that it would probably just have to be a moon.</ref>  Aliens become animals. Guns<ref>My conworld has always lacked "guns" in the sense that most modern people conceive of them.  I basically invented tasers when I was 11, and have no idea if they existed in real life or not at the time.  Thus it was possible to fight a major war with absolutely zero deaths and few wounded.  However, people still used fatal weapons of other types.</ref> become arrows and missile attacks become ground force invasions.  Destroying the sun, however, has so far resisted my attempts at working it into the story.  In a truly unintended irony, the names of the two young boys who fired the missiles that destroyed the sun were named '''the Golden Sun''' and '''the Red Sun''', on account of their respective hair color, which was noticeable because they were immigrants into a city where the vast majority of the population was dark-skinned.<ref>Im backtracking a bit on the idea of not using "Golden". 
 
 
Also, I have no idea where I came up with the names.  I only noticed several years further on that the Red Sun happened to have red hair and that the Golden Sun had brown hair but, since he was patterned after me, in all honesty should have been blonde at least when he was 13 years old.  The fact that they lived in a dark-skinned country is also new, as [[Baeba Swamp]] was patterned after a town in Maine that was around 95% white, and in my stories was a mix between whites and Japanese.  Why Japanese?  I still at that time had not yet given up playing video games and therefore the foreign ethnicity I was most in touch with was the Japanese people who kept feeding me more and more video games that I loved.
 
 
</ref>  I didnt realize the irony because I wrote the story about destroying the sun four years before I got the idea to start giving everyone bynames instead of developing hundreds of conlangs for each time period and using names from those conlangs.  In a second irony, the Red Sun was patterned entirely on a person I had known growing up who thought blonde hair looked weird in any context and often made fun of blonde people.  The Golden Sun, meanwhile, was patterned entirely after myself, which is why the Golden Sun is the leader of the group and the Red Sun merely second in command.  However, he (I) was "so generous" towards his friend that even though he was originally simply named '''the Sun''', because of course the sun is yellow,<ref>I can argue why I believe this if anyone is interested.</ref> he changed his name to the Golden Sun to show that he was considering himself merely the equal of his otherwise less-admired friend.
 
One thing I do know is that destroying the sun was the explanation for why the [[Raspara]] people, hideous parasites whose entire existence depended on abusing the people they lived amongst, suddenly had no power and could not prevent the ascendancy of a government run by the people they had abused for the last sixty years.
 
==Climate==
===Differences from Earth===
Teppala is the size of Earth, but has some differences that produce a different array of climates.  The axial tilt is only about 17°, so locations on Teppala tend to have lower seasonal amplitudes than locations at similar latitudes on Earth.  The zonal wind speed is also greater, so there are fewer examples of air masses penetrating the fronts and appearing outside their usual circulation cell.  However, this also causes the atmosphere to hold five cells instead of three, so the bands from which air masses can reach any given location are significantly closer together than on Earth.
 
====Orbit====
Teppala's orbit is more eccentric than Earth's, with the perihelion in April and the aphelion in October. Because of this, seasons spiral northward across the planet like a barberpole: summer peaks in January at the South Pole, February or March over the southern continent, April at the equator, May in the inner tropics, June in the outer tropics and much of the middle latitudes, and July at the North Pole.  Most people in the middle latitudes experience only two seasons: winter and summer, with an abrupt transition from one to the other.  Growing seasons are therefore about the same length — six months — regardless of latitude, once outside the tropics.  (Note that humans are native only to the Northern Hemisphere.)
 
 
====Climate zones====
Because of the planet's low axial tilt, greater zonal wind speeds, and the small size of the continent of Rilola where humans live, most of the world's climates fall into one of the [[wikipedia:marine climates|marine]] climate categories, and new categories unique to Teppala must be created.  These are:
 
#'''Hypermarine''': Taking Earth's marine climates as the default, there must be a way to mark out climates that are not tropical but have a low seasonal amplitude of temperature even by Teppala's standards.  This climate occurs on Earth too in extremely isolated habitats such as the [[wikipedia:Kerguelen_Islands#Climate|Kerguelen_Islands]], Macquarie_Island, Crozet islands, and Campbell Island NZ, all of which are in the Antarctic and experience the same heavy zonal winds that are common on teppala even over land.
#'''Paratropical''': This is similar. This refers to climates in the desert belt areas where the summer is hot and dry, and the winter is wet, but due to the low axial tilt, still only slightly cooler than it is in the summer.  These climates are essentially tropical climates whose rainfall pattern is reversed from what on Earth is normal: wet summer, dry winter.  This also occurs on Earth in a [[wikipedia:Fortaleza#Climate|few]] isolated [[wikipedia:Trincomalee#Climate|areas]] because of mountains and monsoons, but on Earth, these "reversed" tropical climates are humid even when the rain does not fall.  On Teppala, these climates resemble typical desert climates in the summer, with no rain and low relative humidity, and resemble humid mid-latitude climates in the winter save for the much higher temperatures due to the lack of penetration of cold air from higher latitudes.
#:Many paratropical climates would on Earth be considered ''hot semi-arid climates'', but whereas on Earth the temperature in summer quickly rises away from the immediate coastline (and is sometimes supremely hot even there), on Teppala this is a common climate and is not associated with extreme summer heat.  For example, much of southern Paba has average summer temperatures only around 68F (20C) despite nearly unbroken sunshine.  This means there is less evapostranspiration than on Earth, ample vegetation abounds, and that to call the climate semiarid would be misleading.


===Influence on habitats===
Humans share the planet with many other sapient animals, and are at the mercy of the more powerful ones. For example, in the very center of the Poswob Empire, from about 7700 to 8200 AD, "the Great Feast" occurred, where the population of humans and rabbits began to swell enormously, leading them to spread out and be attacked by predators such as cats and some birds.  After 500 years the human population was whittled down to a few survivors in hard to reach places, as it remains today, but the rabbits survived the attacks and became the dominant species even though they are still fighting off those same predators today.


Even though Teppala is the closest star to its sun (Erasali?), it is slightly colder than Earth.
===Cold Teppala===
===Cold Teppala===
In the year 0, the average temperature along the south coast of Rilola was about 40F (at places like Paba) with almost no change in seasonal temperature bursts.  This is because the eccentricity of the planet was twice as severe then as it is now, and it was balanced such that the perihelion was at the same time as northern winter, and the aphelion was during northern summer.  Inland, sumemr was actually colder than winter, and indeed, the eccenticity was so strong that the whole planet south of aboyut 45N had its seasons all at the same time, and therefore winter cold ruled the world and even the tropics got snow.  However, in the southern hemisphere, summer was extremely hot, with places such as 20S deep inland averaging -10F in winter and 170F in summer. 220F temperautes were not unheard of, as even the inland sea of Kandino had bvoiled awau nmow/. THus life was impossible there even for the hardiest of animals, and life retreated to the coaasts.
In the year 0, the average temperature along the south coast of Rilola was about 40F (at places like Paba) with almost no change in seasonal temperature bursts.  This is because the eccentricity of the planet was twice as severe then as it is now, and it was balanced such that the perihelion was at the same time as northern winter, and the aphelion was during northern summer.  Inland, sumemr was actually colder than winter, and indeed, the eccenticity was so strong that the whole planet south of aboyut 45N had its seasons all at the same time, and therefore winter cold ruled the world and even the tropics got snow.  However, in the southern hemisphere, summer was extremely hot, with places such as 20S deep inland averaging -10F in winter and 170F in summer. 220F temperautes were not unheard of, as even the inland sea of Kandino had bvoiled awau nmow/. THus life was impossible there even for the hardiest of animals, and life retreated to the coaasts.
Line 72: Line 45:
  55N Deep Inland  -32        20
  55N Deep Inland  -32        20
  45N Deep Inland    17        45
  45N Deep Inland    17        45
  30N South Coast    46        82
  30N South Coast    46        82     (near Paba)
  Equator Coast      78        96         
  Equator Coast      78        96         
  20S Deep Inland  121        93
  20S Deep Inland  121        93


These temperatures do not account for thermally induced rainfall; e.g. the 158F is what the temperature *would* be if there were not constant torrential rainfall there. 


Note that it takes up until 45N for the seasons to be in their "proper" order.  Also, note that in 1300BC, winters actually become colder going from 30N to the equator.  This is partly due to cold air crossing the ITCZ and penetrating the northern hemisphere.  But it cannot get all the way to 30N generally.  This is similar to the very rare phenomenon found on Earth where a very strong cold wave from Antarctica will chill out the Amazon rainforest and occasionally peep up over the equator into the Caribbean, making for a cold wave in summer that's colder than any cold wave in winter.


Thus it takes up until 45N for the seasons to be in their "proper" order.  Also, note that in 1300BC, winters actually become colder going from 30N to the equator.  This is partly due to cold air crossing the ITCZ and penetrating the northern hemisphere.  But it cannot get all the way to 30N generally.  This is similar to the very rare phenomenon found on Earth where a very strong cold wave from Antarctica will chill out the Amazon rainforest and occasionally peep up over the equator into the Caribbean, making for a cold wave in summer that's colder than any cold wave in winter.
However, it is also due to the logic of alignement of "high sun" seasons with distance from that sun, meaning the summer in the N Hempishere coincided mostly with the weakest insolation and thus the warmest month was not the same month as further south.


However, it is also due to the logic of alignement of "high sun" seasons with distance from that sun, meaning the summer in the N Hempishere coincided mostly with the weakest insolation and thus the warmest month was not the same month as further south.
===Global Warming===
Even as recently as 4500 AD, roughly the time of the founding of the major cities of the Wamu Empire, the climate was much colder.  For example, winter in Paba was about 15F colder than present.  Lypelpyp was 45F colder than present.  Summers in Paba were about the same, but were much shorter and the warmest time of the year was the vernal equinox.  Summer in Lypelpyp was even hotter than present ... their winters averaged about -5F and summers about 98F ... thus arly Lypelpyp was a difficult place to live.  However, it did have more rain than at present.


===Nutation===
If APR is perihelion in 8773, and FEB in 4100 (but it might be Jan), then it goes roughly 1 month every 2300 yrs, and therefore 6 months in 14000 years. thus peri would be  SEP  in the year 8000 BC, AUG in 10300 BC, JUL in 12600 BC, and JUN in 15000 BC. but, as above, it might be slightly faster than this.
==Climate==
===Differences from Earth===
Teppala is the size of Earth, but has some differences that produce a different array of climates.  The axial tilt is only about 17°, so locations on Teppala tend to have lower seasonal amplitudes than locations at similar latitudes on Earth.  The zonal wind speed is also greater, so there are fewer examples of air masses penetrating the fronts and appearing outside their usual circulation cell.  However, this also causes the atmosphere to hold five cells instead of three, so the bands from which air masses can reach any given location are significantly closer together than on Earth.
====Orbit====
Teppala's orbit is more eccentric than Earth's, with the perihelion in April and the aphelion in October. Because of this, seasons spiral northward across the planet like a barberpole: summer peaks in January at the South Pole, February or March over the southern continent, April at the equator, May in the inner tropics, June in the outer tropics and much of the middle latitudes, and July at the North Pole.  Likewise, summer warps northwards as well. at the South Pole, the coldest month is July, but it shifts to August moving northwards, then to September, and becomes October near the Equator; then, in the northern hemisphere, the coldest month is November in the tropics, then December, and finally January near the North Pole.
Most people in the middle latitudes experience only two seasons: winter and summer, with an abrupt transition from one to the other.  Growing seasons are therefore about the same length — six months — regardless of latitude, once outside the tropics.  (Note that humans are native only to the Northern Hemisphere.)
For example, here are the monthly tmperatures in [[Lypelpyp]], 8773 AD (Fahrenheit):
      Jan  Feb  Mar  Apr  May  Jun  Jul  Aug  Sep  Oct  Nov  Dec
MAX  50  60  74  89  92  96  95  88  72  58  52  49
MIN  28  36  48  59  62  64  64  57  45  34  31  27
Thus, summer and winter each consist of about five months of similar temperatures, with transitional periods being very short.  Thus the people of Lypelpyp speak only of summer and winter. 


The seasonal peaks are near the solstices, with April about as warm as August and October about as cold as February.  This is a far-inland location; near the coasts, the seasons lag somewhat more, but no place has a pattern like Earth.


Climate of Early Cities
====Climate zones====
Because of the planet's low axial tilt, greater zonal wind speeds, and the small size of the continent of Rilola where humans live, most of the world's climates fall into one of the [[wikipedia:marine climates|marine]] climate categories, and new categories unique to Teppala must be created. These are:
              Warmest    Coldest
                Month      Month
Blop            78          8
Paba            82        37
  Lypelpyp        98        -5


#'''Hypermarine''': Taking Earth's marine climates as the default, there must be a way to mark out climates that are not tropical but have a low seasonal amplitude of temperature even by Teppala's standards.  This climate occurs on Earth too in extremely isolated habitats such as the [[wikipedia:Kerguelen_Islands#Climate|Kerguelen_Islands]], Macquarie_Island, Crozet islands, and Campbell Island NZ, all of which are in the Antarctic and experience the same heavy zonal winds that are common on teppala even over land.
#'''Paratropical''': This is similar. This refers to climates in the desert belt areas where the summer is hot and dry, and the winter is wet, but due to the low axial tilt, still only slightly cooler than it is in the summer.  These climates are essentially tropical climates whose rainfall pattern is reversed from what on Earth is normal: wet summer, dry winter.  This also occurs on Earth in a [[wikipedia:Fortaleza#Climate|few]] isolated [[wikipedia:Trincomalee#Climate|areas]] because of mountains and monsoons, but on Earth, these "reversed" tropical climates are humid even when the rain does not fall.  On Teppala, these climates resemble typical desert climates in the summer, with no rain and low relative humidity, and resemble humid mid-latitude climates in the winter save for the much higher temperatures due to the lack of penetration of cold air from higher latitudes.
#:Many paratropical climates would on Earth be considered ''hot semi-arid climates'', but whereas on Earth the temperature in summer quickly rises away from the immediate coastline (and is sometimes supremely hot even there), on Teppala this is a common climate and is not associated with extreme summer heat.  For example, much of southern Paba has average summer temperatures only around 68F (20C) despite nearly unbroken sunshine.  This means there is less evapostranspiration than on Earth, ample vegetation abounds, and that to call the climate semiarid would be misleading.


The persistence of cold into fairly recent times is the main reason why pine trees are the dominant type even in the present-day subtropical south coast (areas like Paba).
===Influence on habitats===
Humans share the planet with many other sapient animals, and are at the mercy of the more powerful ones. For example, in the very center of the Poswob Empire, from about 7700 to 8200 AD, "the Great Feast" occurred, where the population of humans and rabbits began to swell enormously, leading them to spread out and be attacked by predators such as cats and some birds.  After 500 years the human population was whittled down to a few survivors in hard to reach places, as it remains today, but the rabbits survived the attacks and became the dominant species even though they are still fighting off those same predators today.


===Asteroid Impact Event===
===Asteroid Impact Event===

Latest revision as of 03:26, 2 November 2023

Teppala or Tebbala is the planet that contains the human population in Soap's conworld. The diversity of spellings (Teppala, Tebbala, Tippala, Tipala, and even more rare ones) is due to the fact that no one language ever reacghed majority status on that planet.

Even though Teppala is the closest star to its sun (Erasali?), it is slightly colder than Earth.


Global Warming

Even as recently as 4500 AD, roughly the time of the founding of the major cities of the Wamu Empire, the climate was much colder. For example, winter in Paba was about 15F colder than present. Lypelpyp was 45F colder than present. Summers in Paba were about the same, but were much shorter and the warmest time of the year was the vernal equinox. Summer in Lypelpyp was even hotter than present ... their winters averaged about -5F and summers about 98F ... thus arly Lypelpyp was a difficult place to live. However, it did have more rain than at present.


Climate of Early Cities


              Warmest     Coldest
               Month       Month
Blop             78          8
Paba             82         37
Lypelpyp         98         -5


The persistence of cold into fairly recent times is the main reason why pine trees are the dominant type even in the present-day subtropical south coast (areas like Paba).


Cold Teppala

In the year 0, the average temperature along the south coast of Rilola was about 40F (at places like Paba) with almost no change in seasonal temperature bursts. This is because the eccentricity of the planet was twice as severe then as it is now, and it was balanced such that the perihelion was at the same time as northern winter, and the aphelion was during northern summer. Inland, sumemr was actually colder than winter, and indeed, the eccenticity was so strong that the whole planet south of aboyut 45N had its seasons all at the same time, and therefore winter cold ruled the world and even the tropics got snow. However, in the southern hemisphere, summer was extremely hot, with places such as 20S deep inland averaging -10F in winter and 170F in summer. 220F temperautes were not unheard of, as even the inland sea of Kandino had bvoiled awau nmow/. THus life was impossible there even for the hardiest of animals, and life retreated to the coaasts.


Temperature averages (°F):

10000 years ago (1300BC)
                 Global     Global
                 Summer     Winter

North Pole        -54        -39                                    
55N Deep Inland   -55        -42   
45N Deep Inland   -22        -51
30N South Coast    61         27
Equator Coast      92         15         
20S Deep Inland   158        -21
Today
                January      July

North Pole        -27         22                                    
55N Deep Inland   -32         20
45N Deep Inland    17         45
30N South Coast    46         82     (near Paba)
Equator Coast      78         96         
20S Deep Inland   121         93

These temperatures do not account for thermally induced rainfall; e.g. the 158F is what the temperature *would* be if there were not constant torrential rainfall there.

Note that it takes up until 45N for the seasons to be in their "proper" order. Also, note that in 1300BC, winters actually become colder going from 30N to the equator. This is partly due to cold air crossing the ITCZ and penetrating the northern hemisphere. But it cannot get all the way to 30N generally. This is similar to the very rare phenomenon found on Earth where a very strong cold wave from Antarctica will chill out the Amazon rainforest and occasionally peep up over the equator into the Caribbean, making for a cold wave in summer that's colder than any cold wave in winter.

However, it is also due to the logic of alignement of "high sun" seasons with distance from that sun, meaning the summer in the N Hempishere coincided mostly with the weakest insolation and thus the warmest month was not the same month as further south.


Nutation

If APR is perihelion in 8773, and FEB in 4100 (but it might be Jan), then it goes roughly 1 month every 2300 yrs, and therefore 6 months in 14000 years. thus peri would be SEP in the year 8000 BC, AUG in 10300 BC, JUL in 12600 BC, and JUN in 15000 BC. but, as above, it might be slightly faster than this.

Climate

Differences from Earth

Teppala is the size of Earth, but has some differences that produce a different array of climates. The axial tilt is only about 17°, so locations on Teppala tend to have lower seasonal amplitudes than locations at similar latitudes on Earth. The zonal wind speed is also greater, so there are fewer examples of air masses penetrating the fronts and appearing outside their usual circulation cell. However, this also causes the atmosphere to hold five cells instead of three, so the bands from which air masses can reach any given location are significantly closer together than on Earth.

Orbit

Teppala's orbit is more eccentric than Earth's, with the perihelion in April and the aphelion in October. Because of this, seasons spiral northward across the planet like a barberpole: summer peaks in January at the South Pole, February or March over the southern continent, April at the equator, May in the inner tropics, June in the outer tropics and much of the middle latitudes, and July at the North Pole. Likewise, summer warps northwards as well. at the South Pole, the coldest month is July, but it shifts to August moving northwards, then to September, and becomes October near the Equator; then, in the northern hemisphere, the coldest month is November in the tropics, then December, and finally January near the North Pole.


Most people in the middle latitudes experience only two seasons: winter and summer, with an abrupt transition from one to the other. Growing seasons are therefore about the same length — six months — regardless of latitude, once outside the tropics. (Note that humans are native only to the Northern Hemisphere.)

For example, here are the monthly tmperatures in Lypelpyp, 8773 AD (Fahrenheit):

     Jan  Feb  Mar  Apr  May  Jun  Jul  Aug  Sep  Oct  Nov  Dec
MAX   50   60   74   89   92   96   95   88   72   58   52   49
MIN   28   36   48   59   62   64   64   57   45   34   31   27

Thus, summer and winter each consist of about five months of similar temperatures, with transitional periods being very short. Thus the people of Lypelpyp speak only of summer and winter.

The seasonal peaks are near the solstices, with April about as warm as August and October about as cold as February. This is a far-inland location; near the coasts, the seasons lag somewhat more, but no place has a pattern like Earth.

Climate zones

Because of the planet's low axial tilt, greater zonal wind speeds, and the small size of the continent of Rilola where humans live, most of the world's climates fall into one of the marine climate categories, and new categories unique to Teppala must be created. These are:

  1. Hypermarine: Taking Earth's marine climates as the default, there must be a way to mark out climates that are not tropical but have a low seasonal amplitude of temperature even by Teppala's standards. This climate occurs on Earth too in extremely isolated habitats such as the Kerguelen_Islands, Macquarie_Island, Crozet islands, and Campbell Island NZ, all of which are in the Antarctic and experience the same heavy zonal winds that are common on teppala even over land.
  2. Paratropical: This is similar. This refers to climates in the desert belt areas where the summer is hot and dry, and the winter is wet, but due to the low axial tilt, still only slightly cooler than it is in the summer. These climates are essentially tropical climates whose rainfall pattern is reversed from what on Earth is normal: wet summer, dry winter. This also occurs on Earth in a few isolated areas because of mountains and monsoons, but on Earth, these "reversed" tropical climates are humid even when the rain does not fall. On Teppala, these climates resemble typical desert climates in the summer, with no rain and low relative humidity, and resemble humid mid-latitude climates in the winter save for the much higher temperatures due to the lack of penetration of cold air from higher latitudes.
    Many paratropical climates would on Earth be considered hot semi-arid climates, but whereas on Earth the temperature in summer quickly rises away from the immediate coastline (and is sometimes supremely hot even there), on Teppala this is a common climate and is not associated with extreme summer heat. For example, much of southern Paba has average summer temperatures only around 68F (20C) despite nearly unbroken sunshine. This means there is less evapostranspiration than on Earth, ample vegetation abounds, and that to call the climate semiarid would be misleading.

Influence on habitats

Humans share the planet with many other sapient animals, and are at the mercy of the more powerful ones. For example, in the very center of the Poswob Empire, from about 7700 to 8200 AD, "the Great Feast" occurred, where the population of humans and rabbits began to swell enormously, leading them to spread out and be attacked by predators such as cats and some birds. After 500 years the human population was whittled down to a few survivors in hard to reach places, as it remains today, but the rabbits survived the attacks and became the dominant species even though they are still fighting off those same predators today.

Asteroid Impact Event

In the year 0, an asterioid smashed into the area near the Equator, killing most humans, animals, and plants instantly. The outdoor temperature soared to over 500°F and melted hte rocks and boiled away the water. For more than three years after the impact, atmospheric temperatures in this region often exceeded 150°F, and there was almost no rainfall. In the southern hemispgere, the temrpature was as high as 260°F, killing most of the dinosaurs living on Gitaipanu. (The asteroid actually hit slightly south of the equote, so the impact was wors there.) Humans had to live in that environment, survivning by staying mostly underwater in order to keep cool. In the mountains, humans ducked into caves to stay cool (teh caves did notget as hot as the outdoor environment). Since there was almost no rain on the whole planet for several years, most plants and animals died. However, rapidly melting glaciers provided a source of fresh water for much of the mainland and even some islands.

The record-breaking temperatures produced towering thunderstorms that delivered as much as 150" of rain per day on those few places lucky enough to receive them; these were mostly in high mountains.

Political parties

See Political parties of Teppala and the edit history of this page for missing information.

Notes