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  1. Indian summer. An Indian summer day in Fageda d'en Jordà, a beech forest located in Garrotxa county, Catalonia. An Indian summer is a period of unseasonably warm, dry weather that sometimes occurs in autumn in temperate regions of the northern hemisphere.

  2. Jan 7, 2024 · Definition of Indian Summer, Second Summer Here are several criteria for this weather phenomenon, according to The Old Farmer’s Almanac . It’s a period of abnormally warm weather occurring in late autumn between St. Martin’s Day (November 11) and November 20, with generally clear skies, sunny but hazy days, and cool nights.

  3. When European settlers first came across the phenomenon in America it became known as the Indian’s Summer. The haziness of the Indian Summer weather was caused by prairie fires deliberately set by Native American tribes. It was the period when First Nations/Native American peoples harvested their crops.

  4. Indian summer, period of dry, unseasonably warm weather in late October or November in the central and eastern United States. The term originated in New England and probably arose from the Indians’ practice of gathering winter stores at this time.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. The meaning of INDIAN SUMMER is a period of warm or mild weather in late autumn or early winter. How to use Indian summer in a sentence.

  6. Oct 1, 2011 · Some claim that an Indian summer cannot come until after the first damaging frost of autumn, or after a severely cold episode sometimes known as a "Squaw Winter".

  7. May 7, 2024 · “Indian summer” is a phrase most North Americans use to describe an unseasonably warm and sunny patch of weather during autumn. Weather Historian William R Deedler, of the National Weather Service, describes it as “any spell of warm, quiet, hazy weather that may occur in October or even early November”.