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Geography
& Climate
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Chonburi
province, approximately 80 kilometers southeast of Bangkok,
is part of a narrow coastal plain lying between the Damrek
range of hills to the northeast and the Gulf of Thailand to
the south.
Drained
by the Bang Pakong river, Chonburi, like much of central and
southeastern Thailand, was formed by alluvial deposits laid
down over millions of years. Nine thousand years ago, when
sea level was 100 meters below its present height, this part
of Thailand was a low-lying flatland that stretched hundreds
of kilometers beyond the present coastline. Then sea levels
rose until they were several meters higher than they are today,
and 5,000 years ago what is now South East and Central Thailand
was a shallow sea as far north as Ayutthaya, 76 kilometers
north of Bangkok.
As
recently as a century ago most low lying areas of Chonburi
province were natural swamps, marshlands and mangrove forests,
and travel by boat was the only feasible method of transport,
particularly during the monsoon floods. Today canals siphon
off the excess water allowing cultivation of rice, tapioca,
cassava, coconut and sugar cane. Hilly areas, once covered
with thick forest, have been nearly completely denuded by
logging, or cleared to make way for fruit orchards.
The
tropical climate of Chonburi (mean temperature 29.1? C) is
moderated by the monsoons and by it's maritime location. From
November to February the dry season brings cooler temperatures
followed by a hot intermonsoonal period extending into May.
In June the southwest monsoon sends humid air across the Indian
Ocean and the Malay peninsula. The hot air masses pick up
additional moisture as they cross the Gulf of Thailand and
Chonburi province is subject to sudden, violent rainstorms,
often in the early afternoon. The cooling rains, which can
make the area quite humid, peak in September then taper off
in October.
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