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  • Tropical season is not over yet

    Pam Knox

    October 23, 2017

    While the tropics have quieted down quite a bit from their earlier spate of activity, it’s important to remember that the official end of the Atlantic tropical season is November 30, and that we still have almost a month to go before it ends (and some storms have occurred outside the regular season, for that…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Tropical weather
  • How Volcanoes Caused Violent Uprisings in Cleopatra’s Egypt

    Pam Knox

    October 22, 2017

    I’ve seen an interesting story this week in a couple of news outlets describing a recent study which linked volcanic eruptions at high latitudes to the flood climatology of the Nile and also to uprisings in Egypt during the reign of Cleopatra.  Using ice corp data and climate modeling, scientists were able to link low…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, History, Uncategorized
  • Are water wars for agriculture the wave of the future?

    Pam Knox

    October 22, 2017

    In talks I have given and in conversations with other scientists, I’ve discussed the likelihood that future wars may be fought not over property or other causes but over water.  In the Southeast, we’ve seen lawsuits over who has the right to use water and who decides how much (which I won’t get into because…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news
  • How domestication changed five popular foods

    Pam Knox

    October 21, 2017

    Business Insider had an interesting story earlier this year about how domestication changed five different popular foods from something barely recognizable to something delicious.  Check it out and see what your favorite food looked like before scientists and farmers worked their magic at  https://www.businessinsider.com/common-foods-before-and-after-domestication-2016-2.

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Crops, Fruit, Uncategorized
  • Heavy rain coming to parts of the Southeast in the next three days

    Pam Knox

    October 21, 2017

    Rain of three inches or more is coming to parts of the Southeast over the next three days as a strong cold front approaches from the west and passes through the area. The heaviest rain will occur in Alabama and points west but most of the region should see at least an inch of rain…

    Posted in: Climate outlooks
  • Using trends to make seasonal forecasts

    Pam Knox

    October 20, 2017

    Yesterday I posted the latest seasonal outlook for winter for the US.  One of the things it showed was the likely impact of the developing La Niña on this coming winter.  But the Climate Prediction Center uses other things as well to make their predictions.  Here at Climate.gov Tom DiLiberto discusses how trends are used…

    Posted in: Climate science
  • Where to get frost and freeze forecasts

    Pam Knox

    October 20, 2017

    Since it looks like frost may be coming to parts of the Southeast in the next week, I want to provide you with some links to help you find current forecasts for frost.  It looks like to me that we are likely to see our first scattered frost in northern Georgia next week Wednesday or…

    Posted in: Sources of weather and climate data, Tools for climate and agriculture
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The “Climate and Agriculture in the Southeast” blog is provided by the Associate Dean of Extension as a service to Extension agents and agricultural producers across the Southeast US. Come here to find out information about the impacts of weather and climate on agriculture across Georgia and beyond.

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