Not exact matches
Sea surface temperature anomalies are 2 - 5 °C above
normal.
«On May 22nd, 2014, global
sea surface temperature anomalies spiked to an amazing +1.25 degrees Celsius above the, already warmer than
normal, 1979 to 2000 average.
In July,
sea surface temperatures anomalies were already at 1.0 °C above
normal in the central equatorial Pacific Ocean, and in excess of 2.0 °C above
normal across the eastern Pacific — and still rising.
Using a statistical model based on canonical correlation analysis with fall
sea surface temperature anomalies in the North Atlantic as the main predictor, Tivy shows below -
normal ice concentrations throughout most of the region (Figure 12), which suggests an earlier - than -
normal opening of the shipping season.
To estimate heat stress on corals, NOAA scientists multiply the
sea surface temperature anomaly (how many degrees Celsius the
temperature is above the area's
normal summertime maximum) times the number of weeks the
anomaly lasts.