2008 had much cooler
than average temperatures across most of the country.
As we expect to have higher
than average temperature across the entire United States this Fall, I have to put my dream of wearing cozy sweaters on hold for a while.
Not exact matches
Last week's daily
temperatures across the Darling Downs in the high 30's and sometime nudging 40 Celsius were 6 to 8 degrees hotter
than the
average for this time of the year.
•
Temperatures average more
than 2 degrees warmer
across the region now compared to the 1960s.
Results of a new study by researchers at the Northeast Climate Science Center (NECSC) at the University of Massachusetts Amherst suggest that
temperatures across the northeastern United States will increase much faster
than the global
average, so that the 2 - degrees Celsius warming target adopted in the recent Paris Agreement on climate change will be reached about 20 years earlier for this part of the U.S. compared to the world as a whole.
With records dating back to 1880, the global
temperature across the world's land and ocean surfaces for August 2014 was 0.75 °C (1.35 °F) higher
than the 20th century
average of 15.6 °C (60.1 °F).
Northern Africa began the year colder
than average, but by March
temperatures became warmer
than average across the region.
Every state
across the nation had an above -
average autumn
temperature, with 41 states being much warmer
than average.
The January — December map of
temperature anomalies shows that warmer -
than -
average temperatures occurred
across the vast majority of the globe during 2015, combining to bring overall record warmth for 2015, at 0.90 °C (1.62 °F) above the 20th century
average.
Most of Earth's land surfaces were warmer
than average or much warmer
than average, according to the Land & Ocean
Temperature Percentiles map above, with record warmth notable
across most of equatorial and northeastern South America and parts of southeastern Asia.
The highest
temperature anomalies (more
than 5 °C / 9 °F above the 1981 — 2010
average) were observed
across much of northern Eurasia and eastern North America, driving much the global record warmth.
Much warmer -
than -
average temperatures engulfed most of the world's oceans during June 2016, with record high sea surface
temperatures across parts of the central and southwest Pacific Ocean, northwestern and southwestern Atlantic Ocean, and
across parts of the northeastern Indian Ocean.
If global
average temperature were to rise 2.5 °F (1.5 °C) above where it stood in pre-industrial times say earth scientist Anton Vaks of Oxford University and an international team of collaborators (and it's already more
than halfway there), permafrost
across much of northern Canada and Siberia could start to weaken and decay.
A «heatwave» in mid-November caused some parts of the Arctic to be 15C warmer
than usual, with
average temperatures for November and December
across the Arctic as a whole a full 5C above the long term
average, according to the quickfire analysis of this year's unusual winter.
That year Earth's surface
temperature was 1.78 degrees F (0.99 degrees C) warmer
than the
average across the entire 20th century.
In the past year, flea season
across the country has been worse
than ever due to increased
temperatures on
average throughout the U.S., said Adelia Ritchie, Ph.D., founder and co-owner of DERMagic Skin Care for Animals in Kingston, Wash., which offers organic flea and tick treatment products.
Average temperatures for Thailand in June are,
across the board, somewhere between late 20s to early 30s Celsius, and it's likely you'll find it slightly cooler
than the month before.
«During November 2011 - January 2012, there is an increased chance of above -
average temperatures across the south - central U.S. with the odds favoring below -
average temperatures over the north - central U.S.. Also, above -
average precipitation is favored
across the northern tier of states, excluding New England, and drier -
than -
average conditions are more probable
across the southern tier of the U.S. (see 3 - month seasonal outlook released on 20 October 2011).»
WRT water vapor amplification, I suspect that the basic (radiative only) amplifying effect of water vapor, which is something less
than a factor of 2 over the CO2 - only effect of ~ 1.2 C, IIRC, will be close to the same
across a range of
average surface
temperatures.
Scientists from the University of Hawaii at Manoa calculated that by 2047, plus or minus five years, the
average temperatures in each year will be hotter
across most parts of the planet
than they had been at those locations in any year between 1860 and 2005.
(04/22/2013) While the month of March saw colder -
than -
average temperatures across a wide - swath of the northern hemisphere — including the U.S., southern Canada, Europe, and northern Asia — globally, it was the tenth warmest March on record in the last 134 years, putting it in the top 7 percent.
Temperatures across Iowa
averaged 79 degrees F in July 2010, five degrees higher
than average, according to Iowa state climatologist Harry Hillaker.
The winter season
across the region provided
average temperatures 1.0 to 4.0 degrees F (0.5 to 2.2 degrees C) colder
than normal except in Minnesota and western Iowa where
average temperatures were near normal.
Despite getting a little boost from some strong winds
across the tropical Pacific Ocean in January, the warmer -
than -
average ocean
temperatures that drive El Niño have likely peaked.
With climate projections showing a trend to higher
average and higher extreme
temperatures across the West, it's likely that any drought will be more severe
than it would have been without manmade warming, the study — along with others — warns.
Averaged out over a year,
temperatures in greater urban areas, cities and megacities all
across the world are now one to two Kelvin higher
than in the surrounding rural areas.
While December was a warmer
than normal month for the region by several degrees F, a pattern shift in January led to colder
than normal
average temperatures for the month of January
across much of the eastern half of the region.
While others made predictions for
average or warmer
than normal
temperatures, only AER predicted cold for January, February, and March
across the United States, Europe, and Asia.
As the event developed, water
temperatures rose
across the basin to levels well above normal (i.e., long - term
average condition, Figure 2A) and remained above normal for more
than 7 months, resulting in especially severe thermal stress at the northern end of the Lesser Antilles (Figures 1A, S1, S2).
However, they acknowledge that
average temperatures across the UK have increased by more
than 1 °C over the last 100 years, with a particularly steep rise since the early 1960s.
The warm expanse has been characterized by sea surface
temperatures as much as three degrees C (about 5.4 degrees F) higher
than average, lasting for months, and appears on large - scale
temperature maps as a red - orange mass of warm water many hundreds of miles
across.
All of them sit
across the Himalayas from Kathmandu (they're only the worlds tallest mountain range after all) presumably in the mountains or on the Tibetan Plateau, since
average temperatures are all 10 degrees C or more lower
than Kathmandu.
A new paper based on top climate models says that by about 2047,
average temperatures across the globe will be higher
than any highs recorded previously, with tropics hit earlier.
What the report says about climate change and the Arctic: Over the past 50 years, near - surface air
temperatures across Alaska and the Arctic have increased at a rate more
than twice as fast as the global
average.
The
average temperature across the contiguous United States from January through August 2012 was far higher
than in any past year, a full 4 degrees Fahrenheit above the twentieth century
average, according to the National Climatic Data Center.
[later in the report:] Sea surface
temperatures during June 2009 were warmer
than average across much of the world's oceans, with the exception of cooler -
than -
average conditions
across the southern oceans.
That year Earth's surface
temperature was 1.78 degrees F (0.99 degrees C) warmer
than the
average across the entire 20th century.
Since the tropical West Pacific is already warmer on
average than the East, this trend led to a substantial increase in the west - to - east
temperature differential
across the Pacific Ocean basin over a 15 year period.
The last time the world saw colder -
than -
average temperatures across the globe was 1976.
For example, Climate Central recently found that the coldest two weeks of each winter
across the northeast U.S. and southeast Canada have been warming even more quickly
than the global
average temperature rise.
During November 2017, warmer -
than -
average temperatures dominated
across much of the world's land and ocean surfaces, with the most notable
temperature departures from
average across the Northern Hemisphere.
December
temperatures were much below
average across the Upper Midwest and cooler
than average across much of the West, Northwest and Midwest.
February
temperatures were warmer
than average across large parts of Australia, resulting in the second warmest February on record, behind 1983.
At the 16 terrestrial sites where quantitative estimates have been obtained, local HTM
temperatures (primarily summer estimates) were on
average 1.6 + / -.8 °C higher
than present (approximate
average of the 20th century), but the warming was time - transgressive
across the western Arctic.
Specifically, the study found that» [d] uring much of last year's hurricane season, sea - surface
temperatures across the tropical Atlantic between 10 and 20 degrees north... were a record 1.7 degrees F above the 1901 - 1970
average,» «global warming explained about 0.8 degrees F of this rise,» while» [a] ftereffects from the 2004 - 05 El Nino accounted for about 0.4 degrees F,» and a natural cycle in sea - surface
temperatures «explained less
than 0.2 degrees F of the rise.»
They warn that
average temperatures across Britain will reach 3C higher
than today, peaking at 5C higher in the south - east.
Recent research confirms that the above -
average sea
temperatures causing this bleaching
across 38 countries are the result of human - induced global climate change, rather
than from local pollution as was previously argued and the fossil - fuel industry is the main culprit behind these impacts.
«The World's Best Practice climate models predicted Australia would be hotter
than normal in September, instead the maximum
temperature anomaly was 1 to 5 degrees below
average across most of Australia.»
Further, with mean
temperatures across Australia generally well above
average since September 2012, long periods of warmer -
than -
average days have been common, with a distinct lack of cold weather, the statement says.