Not exact matches
With its latest
annual effort at what is known as decadal forecasting, the Met Office is predicting that global
temperatures will continue to rise from 2016 through 2020, with those years likely
falling between 0.5 ° and 1.4 °F (0.28 and 0.77 °C) above the 1981 - 2010 average.
However, between 1938 and 1966 average
annual arctic
temperatures fell 6 degrees F. Had that trend continued,
temperatures would have plummeted 10.7 degrees F in 50 years!»
Here the
annual rise and
fall of the
temperature causes a
fall and then a rise in the CO2 concentration.
Bob Tisdale quantifies: «RSS and UAH «Meteorological
Annual Mean» (December to November) Global
Temperatures Fall Far Short of Record Highs in 2014...»
The forecast by researchers at CU - Boulder's Colorado Center for Astrodynamics Research is based on satellite data and
temperature records and indicates there is a 59 percent chance the
annual minimum sea ice record will be broken this
fall for the third time in five years.
In this region, the winter
temperatures fall to minus 30 °C and average
annual temperature is minus 9 °C.
multiple the
Annual temperature by 20C add 280 to this number if 70 % of the precipitation
falls in the April through Sept time period in the NH.
A slight change of ocean
temperature (after a delay caused by the high specific heat of water, the
annual mixing of thermocline waters with deeper waters in storms) ensures that rising CO2 reduces infrared absorbing H2O vapour while slightly increasing cloud cover (thus Earth's albedo), as evidenced by the fact that the NOAA data from 1948 - 2008 shows a
fall in global humidity (not the positive feedback rise presumed by NASA's models!)
Hard data on the
annual rise and
fall of Earth's global surface
temperatures only goes back about 150 years.
The ice contains tiny air bubbles from the atmosphere in the snow that
fell, and by analysing the composition of the air you can get a climate curve, which tells you about both the
annual temperature and methane content.
On October 18, 2015 team Will Davidson LLP laced up their running shoes, braved the chilly
fall temperatures and headed to the waterfront to participate in the
annual Scotiabank Waterfront run.