Sentences with phrase «average high temps»

Here it is, March 3rd, and snowing when average high temps should be approaching 60.
We also calculated 30 years of average high temps for March, April, May, and June, leaning on data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

Not exact matches

In the case of Texas, the surrounding Gulf of Mexico has recently experienced record - high temps, and this winter was the first time ever that its average temperature did not dip below 73 degrees Fahrenheit.
(2) I see the average temps and humidity for the summer look pretty high — any anecdata as to how oppressive it actually is?
Now if you shrink the running averaging period to zero so only month by month data is shown, in all cases the 2015 temps are higher than 2009.
flxible @ 60: Long term January average temp in Victoria is 7.6 C daily high and 1.44 daily low.
Call me a nutter, but for the past several months I have been paying attention to the temps there in northern Norway and places like Murmansk and Moscow, and they are waaaay high above average — umremittingly so.
Higher average global temps make the planet wetter, colder temps make it dryer (arid).
What did it rise from — and rise to — if the max temp change in the graph (even though it ends incorrectly high at 0.8 degrees instead of about 0.40 average local change) isn't 2.0 C?
The average temps have been higher (no winters) and the biota did better.
Between 1985 and 2012, CO2 increased from 345 to 395 ppm, and the average global temperature increased by 0.3 — 0.4 deg C. Due to the higher temp, the outgoing radiation from earth increased over a wide spectral range (3 - 50microns).
And, let us not forget the article at hand, which now shows that late 20th century average temps are no higher than they have been in the past.
state «we will cap emissions if a) CO2 ppm > 450ppm and b) emissions are higher and c) temps are > 0.3 C above 1990 - 2000 average.
Then they take the high temp, and the low temp, add them together, then divide by 2 to get the average for that day.
What I am worried about, is the combination of higher than average temps across the CAB, while northernmost Siberia is colder than average.
... Fred S. Singer, if you read this, or if somebody who knows you, At KTH Stockholm, September 2006, did you get my pun about the outliers being «outliars»??? And BTW, you are 39 years older on the day than the love of my life... and there are only 2 women having that name on this very planet if not a bunch are having secret numbers... if you generous and dot - omitting, the Texan one... Anectdotal and OT... On topic, always adjustments upwards, after a while... Svenska Dagbladet, Sweden's 2nd biggest morning paper, publish monthly average temps, precipitation etc for Sweden in general and Stockholm in particular, the April «presentation» «already» May 26 or something like that, and, regarding Stockholm Observatory [inner city] 1,0 C too high....
The satellite temps are more sensitive (higher swings) to ENSO and yearly variation than the surface temperatures, and the 5 - year average for 1982 (1979 - 1984) is one of the highest peaks above trend for the UAH record.
And since earth's average nighttime temp is higher, our atmosphere is obviously retaining some latent heat capacity through the night.
Nick, pretty much everyone agrees that global temps are on average higher now than a century or 130 years ago.
Boise itself is having slightly above average temperatures at night (low temp), the difference is the very large negative anomaly in the daily high temperatures.
so that proves global warming, even thought the average global temp is the same as sixteen years ago and the arctic ice cap area is the highest in a decade and the Antarctic ice cap is the highest in four decades.
That's why the very coldest nights at 80 N latitude are about -40 and the very coldest nights at 50 N latitude, where the «average» temp is MUCH higher, are around -40.
Could be due to higher than average temps.
Monckton Craftily starting at a higher than average temp month and extrapolating the linear temp graph to period prior to the temperature raising again.
This created a kind of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde relationship between winter and summer in which high Arctic winter temps seemed outrageously warmer than normal even as summer snapped back to more typical Arctic averages in the furthest north locations.
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