Or föhn.) A warm, dry, 
downslope wind descending the lee side of the Alps as a result of  
synoptic-scale, cross-barrier flow over the mountain range.
The winds are often strong and gusty, sometimes forming downslope windstorms as a result of  
mountain wave activity. The air in the near-surface flow originates at or above the main crest  height of the Alpine barrier, and achieves its warmth and dryness as a result of 
adiabatic descent.  The foehn often replaces a retreating cold 
air mass from a 
polar or 
arctic front, producing  dramatic 
temperature rises that reach 10°C and occasionally even 20°C or more, sometimes in a  matter of minutes. This is especially true of the 
south foehn, which blows from northern Italy,  where the air is warm, to the north of the Alps (Austria, Germany, Switzerland), where the air is  cooler and could be cold 
arctic air as just described. The 
north foehn, blowing from a cooler to  a warmer region, produces less dramatic temperature changes. The air in the foehn, originating  from the mid 
troposphere, is characteristically clean. Its warm temperatures rapidly melt (or  sublimate) 
snow, sometimes producing 
flooding, and the extreme dryness can lead to dangerous  
fire weather conditions. The Alpine foehn has been extensively studied by European scientists,  and it is recognized as the type wind for similar downslope winds, resulting from cross-barrier  flow, in other parts of the world. In other mountain ranges the foehn has a variety of local names,  including 
chinook in the Rocky Mountains in North America; 
zonda for a westerly foehn from  the Argentine Andes; ljuka in Carthinia (northwestern Croatia); 
halny wiatr in Poland; 
austru in  Romania; and 
favogn in Switzerland. A northeasterly foehn descending the Massif Central in  France and extending over the Garonne Plain is locally called 
aspre. A dry wind from the northwest  descending the coastal hills in Majorca is named the 
sky sweeper.
 In New Zealand a foehn blowing  from the New Zealand Alps onto the Canterbury Plains is the Canterbury northwester. A cross-  barrier flow that produces strong winds and cooling is called a 
bora in many parts of the world.  Many authors have attempted to classify strong 
wind events as foehn (or chinook) or bora, for  example, for climatologies. These studies have had mixed success: Many wind events are easy to  classify, but a number of events are difficult, depending on the data available (most studies attempt  to use surface data) and the method used to differentiate between the two types of events. 
See  foehn phase, 
high foehn.
			
		
 
	
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