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My friend John Feldt of Blue Water Outlook has an interesting post (shown below) discussing the severity of the winter this year using the AWSSI index. He explains it below and provides a link to the Midwestern Regional Climate Center’s web page describing winter severity across the US. You can go to the MRCC’s page…
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The WunderBlog today highlighted the incredibly new high temperature record that occurred at multiple sites in the country of Chile this week. “At least twelve different stations recorded a temperature in excess of the nation’s previous all-time heat record—a 41.6°C (106.9°F) reading at Los Angeles on February 9, 1944. According to international weather records researcher…
Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news -
If you are longing for a taste of real winter, then you might enjoy this video of blizzard conditions on top of Mount Washington in New Hampshire from WeatherNationTV at https://www.weathernationtv.com/news/blizzard-conditions-whip-mount-washington-observatory/. Meanwhile, some areas in the Southeast got a little taste of snow yesterday with up to a few inches of snow reported at higher elevations in…
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Modern Farmer published a story this week that discussed the conversion of prime farmland into urban areas across the world. This is certainly something that is happening in the Southeast as large cities like Atlanta and Charlotte expand into “mega-cities”, filling up all the space between city centers with suburbs and exurbs and removing good…
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Each year US Tornadoes keeps a web list of all of the large tornado outbreaks that have occurred. They use a baseline of 20 tornadoes in one event to define what an outbreak is. So far 2017 has had two outbreaks, including the one on January 2 and the one January 21-23. You can come…
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Earlier in January I was fortunate to see “Hidden Figures”, a movie about brilliant African-American women mathematicians who helped NASA successfully launch astronauts into space. If you haven’t seen it yet, you should, and take your kids with you. This week Dr. Marshall Shepherd discusses some of the hidden women in atmospheric sciences in his…
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NOAA’s climate blog has a new entry which provides an excellent description of the difference between short-term weather and long-term climate. In addition to the analogies in this blog, I also like the comparison between a baseball player’s batting average (climate) and his actual performance in one trip to the plate. You can read the…
Posted in: Climate science