upslope - meaning and definition. What is upslope
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What (who) is upslope - definition

WIND WHICH BLOWS UP A STEEP SLOPE OR MOUNTAIN SIDE
Anabatic; Upslope flow; Upslope Flow

upslope      
¦ noun an upward slope.
¦ adverb & adjective at or towards a higher point on a slope.
anabatic         
[?an?'bat?k]
¦ adjective Meteorology (of a wind) caused by local upward motion of warm air.
Origin
early 20th cent.: from Gk anabatikos, from anabates 'a person who ascends'.
Anabatic         
·adj Pertaining to anabasis; as, an anabatic fever.

Wikipedia

Anabatic wind

An anabatic wind, from the Greek anabatos, verbal of anabainein meaning "moving upward", is a warm wind which blows up a steep slope or mountain side, driven by heating of the slope through insolation. It is also known as an upslope flow. These winds typically occur during the daytime in calm sunny weather. A hill or mountain top will be radiatively warmed by the Sun which in turn heats the air just above it. Air at a similar altitude over an adjacent valley or plain does not get warmed so much because of the greater distance to the ground below it. The effect may be enhanced if the lower lying ground is shaded by the mountain and so receives less heat

The air over the hill top is now warmer than the air at a similar altitude around it and will rise through convection. This creates a lower pressure region into which the air at the bottom of the slope flows, causing the wind. It is common for the air rising from the tops of large mountains to reach a height where it cools adiabatically to below its dew point and forms cumulus clouds. These can then produce rain or even thunderstorms.

Anabatic winds are particularly useful to soaring glider pilots who can use them to increase the aircraft's altitude. Anabatic winds can be detrimental to the maximum downhill speed of cyclists.

Conversely, katabatic winds are down-slope winds, frequently produced at night by the opposite effect, the air near to the ground losing heat to it faster than air at a similar altitude over adjacent low-lying land.

Monsoon winds are similarly generated, but on a continental scale and seasonal cycle.

Examples of use of upslope
1. Oil is abundant and cheap on the upslope, scarce and expensive on the down.
2. On the upslope of the curve production costs are significantly lower than on the downslope, when extra expense is required to extract the oil from depleting reservoirs.
3. Small animals such as bushy tailed rats, chipmunks and pinion mice are being chased upslope by rising temperatures, until they at last have no place to run.