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Bloomberg Businessweek had an interesting story this week about how beef producers in Florida are working to develop cattle that are better adapted to hot conditions and still produce good-tasting meat. The article points out that cattle don’t like hot weather and that as temperatures have climbed, cattlemen are trying to create breeds that are…
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The latest Drought Monitor shows slight changes in drought across the region this week in response to the rains of last week. Alabama lost the most dry area, and should continue to see less dry area in next week’s map in response to the rains that are starting to hit the region today. Most of…
Posted in: Drought -
The American Meteorological Society (AMS) is the main professional society of atmospheric scientists in the world, with several thousand active members. I have been a member since I started graduate school in 1980, and currently serve on their Board of Certified Consulting Meteorologists. This week the AMS released their latest statement on climate change, which…
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CNN produced an interesting quiz based on information from Project Drawdown, which is aimed at reducing greenhouse warming in our everyday lives. You can take the quiz here. As you take it, you will note that many of the best solutions don’t have to do with reducing meat consumption or other aspects of agriculture but…
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The North Carolina State Climate Office published a report on the latest severe weather outbreak which affected the Southeast last Friday and Saturday. In NC they experienced 13 tornadoes along with numerous other reports of severe weather. You can read more about their outbreak at https://climate.ncsu.edu/climateblog?id=282&h=5666e5c1.
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You’ve all seen mirages. One of the most common is a phantom image that looks like water on a highway. Mirages are caused by vertical variations in temperature that can bend light rays, resulting in distant objects looking much different than their actual appearance. Atlas Obscura has an interesting article on mirages this week that…
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Fast Company posted an interesting story this week on a recent map produced by AT&T showing where their infrastructure in the Southeast is likely to be affected by impacts due to climate change, including inland flooding, sea level rise, and high intensity winds. The map looks a little odd to me in Georgia because there…
Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news