• Here is a lengthy (67 pages!) web site which provides a thorough background on the science of climate, from Andrew Revkin. He describes it as “a primer based on decades of reports from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, IPCC and other peer-reviewed lit.”  You can view the web site at https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/3680541-Climate101.html. You might…

    Posted in:
  • If you like time lapse cloud pictures like I do, and would like to live vicariously by visiting the Grand Canyon on video (I haven’t been there yet but hope to someday), you will love this 3-minute video of a rare cloud inversion, where clouds fill the bowl of the canyon.  You can read about…

    Posted in:
  • NOAA released their latest monthly summary of climate for the US in April 2017 yesterday.  It shows that for the US as a whole, it was the second wettest and the 11th warmest April since records began in 1895.  It was the second warmest year to date and the 5th wettest.  You can read more…

    Posted in:
  • Here are a couple of different tools I’ve run across this week which look at the effects of rising sea levels on coastal areas of the US. The Tides and Currents site at https://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/sltrends/sltrends.html shows how local sea level rise differs from global sea level rise.  The total sea level rise is a combination of rising…

    Posted in: , ,
  • The Vegetable and Specialty Crop News posted a story this week about the development of tea as a new specialty crop in the Southeast.  Of course there have been some tea plantations in the South in the past, but a Florida researcher is looking into adding tea to the bouquet of specialty crops growing in…

    Posted in: ,
  • USDA meteorology Brad Rippey provides a look at summer weather across the US in an article published this week at Growing Georgia here.  While drought across the nation is at very low levels, the drought in the Southeast looks like it could continue at least on the short term, although he is hopeful that once…

    Posted in:
  • NASA released their monthly global climate summary for April 2017 today.  It shows that April was the second warmest in 137 years of record following the record setting year in 2016. While most areas of the globe were above normal, especially in the Arctic, you can still find some regions that were below the long-term…

    Posted in: