If you want more, there's plenty available both on the web and in the
library. I suggest you try learning something for a change.
Steve
Here, stupid, from the link that YOU posted!!!!!:
What causes wind?
Wind is caused by air flowing from high pressure to low pressure.
Since the Earth is rotating, however, the air does not flow directly
from high to low pressure, but it is deflected to the right (in the
Northern Hemisphere; to the left in the Southern Hemisphere), so that
the wind flows around the high and low pressure areas. This effect of
the wind "feeling the Earth turn underneath it" is important for very
large and long-lived pressure systems. For small, short-lived systems
(such as in the cold outflow of a thunderstorm) the wind will flow
directly from high pressure to low pressure.
The closer the high and low pressure areas are together, the stronger
the "pressure gradient", and the stronger the winds. On weather maps,
lines of constant pressure are drawn (as in the example, above) which
are called "isobars". These isobars are usually labeled with their
pressure value in millibars (mb). The closer these lines are together,
the stronger the wind. The curvature of the isobars is also important
to the wind speed. Given the same pressure gradient (isobar spacing),
if they are curved anticyclonically (around the high pressure in the
above example) the wind will be stronger. If the isobars are curved
cyclonically (around the low pressure in the example above) the wind
will be weaker.
Great, so you can cut'n'paste. You just don't know the meaning of what
you're cutting and pasting. Nowhere above does it say that the sun is
not the motive force that creates the pressure differentials which cause
wind. Try again.