Despite this two month return to more typical conditions, November marked a return to the pattern established earlier in the year with record breaking minimum temperatures and above normal to much above
normal daily maximums.
In fact, in my city, today's statistical
normal daily maximum temperature of 46 degrees F rarely actually occurs since that value is based on the daily maximum temperatures from each January 8th during the period from 1971 - 2000.
Not exact matches
Normal people pass up to three pints of gases
daily; that is 14 times
maximum.
However, while annual peak
daily streamflow (APDF) during the spring freshet in the FRB is historically well correlated with basin - averaged, annual
maximum snow water equivalent (SWEmax), there are numerous occurrences of anomalously large APDF in below - or near -
normal SWEmax years, some of which have resulted in damaging floods in the region.
Similarly, the
maximum daily precipitation shows isolated patches across Europe with larger than
normal values.
2010 BoM annual records state that «Perth Metro's annual mean
daily maximum temperature in 2010 was 25.3 C, which was the warmest year on record since records commenced in 1897», while «Perth Metro's annual mean
daily minimum temperature in 2010 was 12.4 C, which was 0.3 C below
normal»
Daily maximum temperatures were near
normal throughout almost all of BC.
Daily maximum temperatures were below
normal in the south east and near
normal almost everywhere else except in the north and northeast part of the province where temperatures were above
normal.
September average
daily maximums were close to
normal or below
normal in some locations while October brought very cold conditions in northern BC with average
daily maximum temperatures in the coldest ten percent of the long - term record and
daily minimum temperatures below
normal.
Within this season, some of the coolest monthly average
daily maximum temperatures of the year (relative to
normal) were recorded.