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This relates to my previous question about a fictional planet: Length of seasons on a planet with eliptical orbit.

In short summary, it is an oceanic world with many islands and archipelagoes that have 45 degrees axial tilt to the orbital plane (and a very elliptical orbit, if it matters in this question).

The question is: how would be climatic zones - tropic, subtropic, temperate, polar - distributed on such a planet?

Adding details for which the need has transpired:

The planet has tectonic activity, the same as Earth. It causes quakes and volcanic eruptions, fractures the planet's crust into plates, and makes them drift around.

The largest island is similar in size and shape to Greenland, but it is located on the equator and with a long point towards the west; thus, it splits the equatorial circumnavigating stream in two. There are a few little bit smaller islands, but the majoritymost of the land mass is small islands and archipelagoes similar to those of the Pacific Ocean and Mediterranean.

Islands that are large enough, to have mountains or mountain ranges. In some archipelagoes, major islands form a ligneline with close gaps of water between them, as if a mountain range submerged in water, leaving only peaks above, and are situated in a way that disrupts major oceanic streams.

This relates to my previous question about a fictional planet: Length of seasons on a planet with eliptical orbit.

In short summary, it is an oceanic world with many islands and archipelagoes that have 45 degrees axial tilt to the orbital plane (and a very elliptical orbit, if it matters in this question).

The question is: how would be climatic zones - tropic, subtropic, temperate, polar - distributed on such a planet?

Adding details for which the need has transpired:

The planet has tectonic activity, the same as Earth. It causes quakes and volcanic eruptions, fractures the planet's crust into plates, and makes them drift around.

The largest island is similar in size and shape to Greenland, but it is located on the equator and with a long point towards the west; thus, it splits the equatorial circumnavigating stream in two. There are a few little bit smaller islands, but the majority of the land mass is small islands and archipelagoes similar to those of the Pacific Ocean and Mediterranean.

Islands that are large enough, have mountains or mountain ranges. In some archipelagoes, major islands form a ligne with close gaps of water between them, as if a mountain range submerged in water, leaving only peaks above, and are situated in a way that disrupts major oceanic streams.

This relates to my previous question about a fictional planet: Length of seasons on a planet with eliptical orbit.

In short summary, it is an oceanic world with many islands and archipelagoes that have 45 degrees axial tilt to the orbital plane (and a very elliptical orbit, if it matters in this question).

The question is: how would be climatic zones - tropic, subtropic, temperate, polar - distributed on such a planet?

Adding details for which the need has transpired:

The planet has tectonic activity, the same as Earth. It causes quakes and volcanic eruptions, fractures the planet's crust into plates, and makes them drift around.

The largest island is similar in size and shape to Greenland, but it is located on the equator and with a long point towards the west; thus, it splits the equatorial circumnavigating stream in two. There are a few little bit smaller islands, but most of the land mass is small islands and archipelagoes similar to those of the Pacific Ocean and Mediterranean.

Islands that are large enough to have mountains or mountain ranges. In some archipelagoes, major islands form a line with close gaps of water between them, as if a mountain range submerged in water, leaving only peaks above, and are situated in a way that disrupts major oceanic streams.

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This relates to my previous question about a fictional planet: Length of seasons on a planet with eliptical orbit.

In short summary, it is an oceanic world with lots ofmany islands and archipelagoes that have 45 degrees axial tilt to the orbital plane (and a very elliptical orbit, if it matters in this question).

The question is: how would be climatic zones - tropic, subtropic, temperate, polar - distributed on such a planet?

Adding details for which the need has transpired:

The planet has tectonic activity, the same as Earth. It causes quakes and volcanic eruptions, fractures the planet's crust into plates, and makes them drift around.

The largest island is similar in size and shape to Greenland, but it is located on the equator and with a long point towards the west; thus, it splits the equatorial circumnavigating stream in two. There are a few little bit smaller islands, but the majority of the land mass is small islands and archipelagoes similar to those of the Pacific Ocean and Mediterranean.

Islands that are large enough, have mountains or mountain ranges. In some archipelagoes, major islands form a ligne with close gaps of water between them, as if a mountain range submerged in water, leaving only peaks above, and are situated in a way that disrupts major oceanic streams.

This relates to my previous question about a fictional planet: Length of seasons on a planet with eliptical orbit.

In short summary, it is an oceanic world with lots of islands and archipelagoes that have 45 degrees axial tilt to the orbital plane (and a very elliptical orbit, if it matters in this question).

The question is: how would be climatic zones - tropic, subtropic, temperate, polar - distributed on such a planet?

This relates to my previous question about a fictional planet: Length of seasons on a planet with eliptical orbit.

In short summary, it is an oceanic world with many islands and archipelagoes that have 45 degrees axial tilt to the orbital plane (and a very elliptical orbit, if it matters in this question).

The question is: how would be climatic zones - tropic, subtropic, temperate, polar - distributed on such a planet?

Adding details for which the need has transpired:

The planet has tectonic activity, the same as Earth. It causes quakes and volcanic eruptions, fractures the planet's crust into plates, and makes them drift around.

The largest island is similar in size and shape to Greenland, but it is located on the equator and with a long point towards the west; thus, it splits the equatorial circumnavigating stream in two. There are a few little bit smaller islands, but the majority of the land mass is small islands and archipelagoes similar to those of the Pacific Ocean and Mediterranean.

Islands that are large enough, have mountains or mountain ranges. In some archipelagoes, major islands form a ligne with close gaps of water between them, as if a mountain range submerged in water, leaving only peaks above, and are situated in a way that disrupts major oceanic streams.

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How would climate zones be distributed on a planet with 45 degree axial tilt?

This relates to my previous question about a fictional planet: Length of seasons on a planet with eliptical orbit.

In short summary, it is an oceanic world with lots of islands and archipelagoes that have 45 degrees axial tilt to the orbital plane (and a very elliptical orbit, if it matters in this question).

The question is: how would be climatic zones - tropic, subtropic, temperate, polar - distributed on such a planet?