In Siberia it may have been the coldest on record, since
the first weather observations 130 years ago.
Not exact matches
Also, in spite of centuries of
observation and speculation, this is the
first large El Niño scientists have predicted far in advance of the related
weather.
At
first, all I was pointing out was my
observation of a change in global
weather patterns around 2000 from a warming mode back to those more like the cooling mode of the 60's and 70's.
I
first became skeptical after working on the FAAs
weather observation stations at a System Engineering firm.
For the
first six decades to 1720 the figures are printed in italics as an indication that they must be considered less reliable, based as they are on extrapolation from the results of readings of highly imperfect instruments in uncertain exposures at a considerable distance, generally in south - east England; or on estimates based on interpretations of daily
observations of wind and
weather.
See, the
first thing to do is do determine what the temperature trend during the recent thermometer period (1850 — 2011) actually is, and what patterns or trends represent «data» in those trends (what the earth's temperature / climate really was during this period), and what represents random «noise» (day - to - day, year - to - random changes in the «
weather» that do NOT represent «climate change»), and what represents experimental error in the plots (UHI increases in the temperatures, thermometer loss and loss of USSR data, «metadata» «M» (minus) records getting skipped that inflate winter temperatures, differences in sea records from different measuring techniques, sea records vice land records, extrapolated land records over hundreds of km, surface temperature errors from lousy stations and lousy maintenance of surface records and stations, false and malicious time - of -
observation bias changes in the information.)
This, however, is just the
first step for this new source of
weather observations, and planning has already started on the next phase of developments.
Within months of the arrival of the
First Fleet, Australia's first «meteorologist», Lieutenant William Dawes, set up an astronomical observatory and commenced recording weather observat
First Fleet, Australia's
first «meteorologist», Lieutenant William Dawes, set up an astronomical observatory and commenced recording weather observat
first «meteorologist», Lieutenant William Dawes, set up an astronomical observatory and commenced recording
weather observations.