Land goes up sharply through the most recent year;
sea temps trend down noticably over the last two years.
Not exact matches
The most exciting thing is we'll get a chance to see the relative strength of all of these over the next few years, and it will most interesting to compare the total decade of 2010 - 2019 to previous decades in terms of the
trends in Arctic
Sea ice, Global
Temps, and of course, OHC.
Combine the satellite
trend with the surface observations and the umpteen non-temperature based records that reflect temperature change (from glaciers to phenology to lake freeze dates to snow - cover extent in spring & fall to
sea level rise to stratospheric
temps) and the evidence for recent gradual warming is, well, unequivocal.
THERE HAS BEEN A WARMING
TREND FROM THE 70s THRU THE LATE 90s,... accompanied by other changes tied to a warming trend (record low arctic sea ice extent & thickness, retreating glaciers, retreating snow lines, warming ocean surface temps, increases in sea height, de-alkalinizing oce
TREND FROM THE 70s THRU THE LATE 90s,... accompanied by other changes tied to a warming
trend (record low arctic sea ice extent & thickness, retreating glaciers, retreating snow lines, warming ocean surface temps, increases in sea height, de-alkalinizing oce
trend (record low arctic
sea ice extent & thickness, retreating glaciers, retreating snow lines, warming ocean surface
temps, increases in
sea height, de-alkalinizing oceans).
1 — did the circulation - driven fall in Arctic
sea ice (which AR4 models don't do a great job of) have anything to do with the recent jump in Arctic temperatures and if so, could we get the «right» global
temp trend for the «wrong» reasons.
It made me wonder if the
sea air
temp had an overall elevated
trend as Richardson claimed why had the «consensus» resisted until now citing the historical observed data (HadNMAT2 back to 1880).
I have also read, though it will probably be open to much conjecture, that there has been a slowing in CO2 level increases, a cooler ocean
temp emerging and a slowing
trend to
sea level rises since 2006.
Norbert: if you include both land and
sea temperatures combined then we are likely to see consecutive records broken month in - month out from now on until there is a large prolonged
trend in land / air
temps the other way which at the momenmt seems increasingly unlikely.
Steve, when
TREND of UAH - ocean matches SST well, while
TREND of UAH - land is considderably colder than ground based land — you just focus on the fact that UAH
temps oscillates on very short term more than
sea surface
temps?
I asked my colleague Ed Allnutt, Director Hays Oil & Gas, about
temp versus perm hiring
trends in the areas where he operates, which include the UK and North
Sea, Western Europe and Africa.