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  • Help NASA monitor eclipse weather

    Pam Knox

    August 1, 2017

    NASA is asking for the help of citizen scientists to monitor weather conditions during the August 21 eclipse as it passes across the US. According to Popular Science, they are looking for people to download the GLOBE app to their smartphones and report changes in cloud cover and/or temperature during the eclipse as they are…

    Posted in: Events, Sources of weather and climate data
  • “New study shows the Amazon makes its own rainy season”

    Pam Knox

    August 1, 2017

    Phys.org published an article earlier this month on a new study of the Amazon rain forest which shows observationally that the end of the dry season there is triggered by water vapor emanating from the trees there.  According to the article, until now scientists have not been able to determine why the rainy season begins…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Climate science, Forests
  • South Carolina watermelon farmers report double the usual crop

    Pam Knox

    July 31, 2017

    The Southeast Farm Press had a short article this week which said that many South Carolina watermelon farmers are reporting crops that are twice their usual size this year. Watermelons cover 8,000 acres of the state and are produced in every county, although they are concentrated in the Low Country and the Sand Hills region. …

    Posted in: Fruit
  • “Meet the woman who first identified the greenhouse effect”

    Pam Knox

    July 31, 2017

    Most climatologists attribute the discovery of the greenhouse effect caused by absorption of terrestrial energy by carbon dioxide and other so-called “greenhouse gases” to Irish physicist John Tyndall in 1859 and the following years. According to a story in Climate Change News, “A recently digitized copy of The American Journal of Science and Arts suggests a woman…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Climate science, History
  • “World weather libraries offer historic clues about climate”

    Pam Knox

    July 31, 2017

    Did you know that one of the world’s major repositories of climate data is located here in the Southeast in Asheville NC? Of course you did, if you read this blog regularly. The two other main ones are in Hamburg, Germany, and Obninsk, Russia, but there are several other smaller ones as well. Here’s a…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, History, Sources of weather and climate data
  • Most of Southeast above normal in temperature in July 2017

    Pam Knox

    July 30, 2017

    With just a couple of days to go in the month, the ACIS maps from the High Plains Regional Climate Center show that precipitation was variable across the Southeast but that most areas have experienced above normal temperatures.  A major contribution to the warm temperatures was nighttime high temperatures. You can see maps for other…

    Posted in: Climate summaries
  • “Why fireflies light up”

    Pam Knox

    July 30, 2017

    While stories about fireflies are not directly related to climate or agriculture, to me they are the quintessential sign of summer.  You might enjoy this story from EarthSky on why fireflies light up.  Read it at https://earthsky.org/earth/bugs-firefly-light.

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news
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About this blog

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.

Recent Posts

  • Tropical Depression 2 forms in the Bay of Campeche, not expected to affect the Southeast
  • Heaviest rain this week along the NE Gulf Coast
  • Critical hurricane forecast tool abruptly terminated
  • Another quiet week in the tropics
  • Small area of extreme drought in Florida

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