But it doesn't change the basic conclusion, which is that in terms of the way medium -
term average temp has drifted over the Holocene, 0.8 °C is a lot.
Not exact matches
The International Confederation of Private Employment Services, the industry's global lobbying arm, says Canada is home to 2,400
temp agency offices hiring out 450,000 annually; TD Economics forecasts temporary employment in Canada will remain above long -
term averages until at least 2018.
Ranked warmest years in the series going back to 1914 are: # 2006 9.73 °C # 2003 9.51 °C # 2004 9.48 °C # 2002 9.48 °C # 2005 9.46 °C Mean temperature, sunshine and rainfall for regions of the UK compared with the long -
term average UK regional
averages for 2006, anomalies with respect to 1971 - 2000 Region Mean
temp Sunshine Rainfall Actual [°C] Anom [°C] Actual [hours] Anom [%] Actual [mm] Anom [%] UK 9.7 +1.1 1,507 113 1,176 104 England 10.6 +1.2 1,638 112 8,51 102 Wales 9.9 +1.0 1,534 113 1,420 99 Scotland 8.3 +1.1 1,300 112 1,652 109 N Ireland 9.6 +1.0 1,409 115 1,156 104
flxible @ 60: Long
term January
average temp in Victoria is 7.6 C daily high and 1.44 daily low.
«So at a time when the climate system is losing heat, reported
temps aare shown to increase, raising the long
term temp averages.»
So at a time when the climate system is losing heat, reported
temps are shown to increase, raising the long
term temp averages.
The current value of the long
term trend line will vary slowly, but the 12 months running
average and the red circle around the
temp in the last month will retain the newsworthiness of the plot.
's 5 W / m2 is even close to accurate, in looking at some calculations I've seen, which show that the difference between the peak solar cycle and the minimum is about.322 W / m2 across the entire planet in
terms of irradiance, and this translates into about.2 C in global
temp difference on
average, then my rough estimate of.1 C in TSI effect in 1998's El Nino versus 2009 - 2010 is an undershoot, but either way it looks like the TSI effect in 1998 is far more than the.01 C that some have suggested would be the level to be even significant.
Defining Climate Climate = long
term weather patterns... —
Averages and variations in
temp., precip., wind, etc..
The model outputs are generally presented as an
average of an ensemble of individual runs (and even ensembles of individual runs from multiple models), in order to remove this variability from the overall picture, because among grownups it is understood that 1) the long
term trends are what we're interested and 2) the coarseness of our measurements of initial conditions combined with a finite modeled grid size means that models can not predict precisely when and how
temps will vary around a trend in the real world (they can, however, by being run many times, give us a good idea of the * magnitude * of that variance, including how many years of flat or declining temperatures we might expect to see pop up from time to time).