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  • 60th anniversary of first tornado on radar

    Pam Knox

    April 9, 2016

    Jim Angel, the Illinois State Climatologist, noted that today marks the 60th anniversary of the first date that a tornado was seen on radar.  Now we have much more sophisticated radars that not only see the storms in multiple dimensions and colors but can also point out flying debris as well as flying birds and…

    Posted in: History, Severe
  • Florida peninsula driest this coming week

    Pam Knox

    April 9, 2016

    The 7 day QPF map shows that the driest part of the Southeast in the coming week will be the peninsula of Florida, with the driest area farthest south.  Light to moderate amounts of rain are expected elsewhere except in Alabama as the next storm system approaches by the end of next week.

    Posted in: Climate outlooks
  • Wet start to April for Georgia

    Pam Knox

    April 8, 2016

    The first week of April 2016 has been much wetter than normal for a significant part of Georgia and surrounding areas.  Temperatures have been above normal in southern parts of the Southeast.  Colder temperatures for the next two weeks should help bring the temperature closer to normal, although things may warm up at the end…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Climate summaries
  • Global drought stories show widespread impact of El Niño

    Pam Knox

    April 8, 2016

    A number of news stories in recent weeks have shown the influence of the waning strong El Niño on climate around the world.  Here is a sampling of stories on the agricultural impacts of droughts in some of these areas. News24 reported that drought in Zimbabwe has caused the deaths of at least 19,300 head…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Drought, Uncategorized
  • First routine weather satellite image: April 1, 1960

    Pam Knox

    April 8, 2016

    Satellite data is the single most important source of weather data used to input into weather forecast models, providing millions of points of information that help to make forecasts accurate.  And yet there was a time when there was no man-made satellite looking down on the earth.  April 1, 1960 was the first date that…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, History, Interesting weather images
  • Cold weather could bring frost and freeze to northeast Georgia and the Carolinas

    Pam Knox

    April 7, 2016

    Another outbreak of chilly air is moving into the Southeast this weekend, and it could bring temperatures near or below freezing to northern and higher elevation areas of Georgia and North and South Carolina on Saturday and Sunday mornings.  The National Weather Service has issued frost and freeze warnings for Thursday night into Friday morning for…

    Posted in: Climate outlooks, Crops
  • New sea-level resource website from NASA

    Pam Knox

    April 7, 2016

    NASA has a new web site dedicated to providing resources on sea level for across the US.  The site is available at https://sealevel.nasa.gov/.  You can also read more about it at TechCrunch at https://techcrunch.com/2016/04/04/nasas-new-sea-level-site-puts-climate-change-papers-data-and-tools-online/. The site is focused on space-based observations (hence why it is coming from NASA instead of NOAA) but has plenty of land-based indicators…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Coastal, Sources of weather and climate data
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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.

Recent Posts

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  • Drought continues to disappear from the Southeast
  • Another week with rain ahead

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