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NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio produced an article recently discussing the importance of sea ice and Arctic clouds on global climate. If you get questions about why we should care about the changes in sea ice over time, this will provide you with some simple and useful information that you can use to explain the energy balance on…
Posted in: Climate science -
AP’s The Big Story blog posted a story yesterday on the deaths caused by the floods that recently swept South Carolina. Ten people drowned in their cars in the Columbia SC area from October 3 to 5 as flood waters ravaged the city. “Some were going to work. Some were going to someone else’s aid.…
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The latest 7-day QPF map shows a big fat goose egg in the rainfall department this coming week. The only place in the Southeast that is expected to see any rain at all is the east coast and southern tip of Florida. This is thanks to a dome of high pressure over the region which…
Posted in: Climate outlooks -
Vegetable Growers News published a reminder this week of the many programs that are available to assist farmers after natural disasters like the flooding in South Carolina earlier this month. If you or a farmer you work with is affected by a natural disaster, make sure you understand all of the help that is available. …
Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news -
In recent climate news all of the attention has been on the upcoming winter and what to expect from El Niño. Most predictions show that we should start the growing season with plenty of soil moisture, and perhaps so much that field work is delayed in spring. But many farmers are also wondering what the…
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Forty years ago today, on October 16, 1975, NOAA’s first Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite was launched from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. Known as GOES-A when it launched, the satellite was designated GOES-1 once operational. GOES stands for Geostationary Orbiting Earth Satellite. GOES-1 returned its first image only nine days later on October 25,…
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Our sister blog for the “Animal Agriculture in a Changing Climate” project has a new blog post out this week with the title above. You can read the post at https://animalagclimatechange.org/mother-nature-always-wins/. The blog discusses the impacts of extreme weather events on livestock production and agriculture and how future extreme events might impact farmers. The project has a…