Not exact matches
Warm sea
surface temperature anomalies persist off to W and SW of San Diego, but are smaller than in previous weeks over the past
month.
• clean and sterilise all feeding parts before each use • do not use abrasive cleaning agents or anti-bacterial cleaners with bottles and teats • wash your hands thoroughly and ensure
surfaces are clean before handling sterilised components • for inspection of the teat, pull it in each direction • place the teat in boiling water for 5 minutes before first use to ensure hygiene • throw away bottle and teats at the first sight of damage, weakness or scratching • replace teats and spouts after 3
months use • do not
warm milk in a microwave as this may cause uneven heating and could scald your baby • always check the milk
temperature before feeding • make sure that the bottles are not over-tightened • do not allow your baby to play with small parts or run or walk while feeding
Schmidt's rough estimate, which he posted on Twitter, is based on the extraordinary and unprecedented
warming over the past 12
months, during which time global
surface temperatures have shot past the 1 °C above pre-industrial level.
First, sea -
surface temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico have been higher than normal in the past couple of
months, due to global
warming, which means the air that flowed north would have been
warmer to start with.
The future of the currents, whether slowing, stopping or reversing (as was observed during several
months measurements), could have a profound effect on regional weather patterns — from colder winters in Europe to a much
warmer Caribbean (and hence
warmer sea
surface temperatures to feed hurricanes).
Analyzing data collected over a 20 -
month period, scientists from NASA's Goddard Space Flight center in Greenbelt, Md., and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology found that the number of cirrus clouds above the Pacific Ocean declines with
warmer sea
surface temperatures.
«The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said global land
surface temperatures in January and April were likely the
warmest since records began in 1880, at more than 1 degree Celsius higher than average for those
months.
With the contribution of such record warmth at year's end and with 10
months of the year record
warm for their respective
months, including the last 8 (January was second
warmest for January and April was third
warmest), the average global
temperature across land and ocean
surface areas for 2015 was 0.90 °C (1.62 °F) above the 20th century average of 13.9 °C (57.0 °F), beating the previous record warmth of 2014 by 0.16 °C (0.29 °F).
Any way you look it, from the Climate Prediction Center Outlook through May, to the ongoing
warm anomalies in land and sea
surface temperatures, much of the United States is likely to find above average
temperatures in the coming
months.
Even during the region's
warmest months, sea
surface temperatures can range from 80 down to below 70 degrees, and winter may bring chilly waters in the mid 60s, and occasionally as low as 58 degrees.
«The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said global land
surface temperatures in January and April were likely the
warmest since records began in 1880, at more than 1 degree Celsius higher than average for those
months.
The 2005 Jan - Sep land data (which is adjusted for urban biases) is higher than the previously
warmest year (0.76 °C compared to the 1998 anomaly of 0.75 °C for the same
months, and a 0.71 °C anomaly for the whole year), while the land - ocean
temperature index (which includes sea
surface temperature data) is trailing slightly behind (0.58 °C compared to 0.60 °C Jan - Sep, 0.56 °C for the whole of 1998).
The National Climatic Data Center has released its review of worldwide sea
surface temperatures for August and for the stretch from June through August and finds that both the
month and the «summer» (as looked at from the Northern Hemisphere) were the
warmest at least since 1880, when such records were first systematically compiled.
El Niño
warms up
surface temperatures, but the excess heat takes 3 to 6
months or so to diffuse into the middle troposphere, around 16,000 feet up.
European researchers, under the Copernicus Climate Service, using a slightly different method of analysing the
surface temperature data than Nasa, also found that February 2016 was by far the
warmest month on record.
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.
Furthermore, significant
warming during the satellite sea
surface temperature record (1982 — 2009) is mainly limited to the summer
months... we speculate that Bering Sea primary productivity is likely to rise under conditions of future
warming and sea ice loss.»
«From 1910 - 1949 (pre-agricultural development, pre-DEV) to 1970 - 2009 (full agricultural development, full - DEV), the central United States experienced large - scale increases in rainfall of up to 35 % and decreases in
surface air
temperature of up to 1 °C during the boreal summer
months of July and August... which conflicts with expectations from climate change projections for the end of the 21st century (i.e.,
warming and decreasing rainfall)(Melillo et al., 2014).»
This was
warm enough to set another milestone that had already been set two previous times this year; the average global sea
surface temperature was so
warm in September that it broke the all - time record for the highest departure from average for any
month since 1880, at 1.19 degrees Fahrenheit above average.
Last
month's combined global land and ocean
surface temperature made it the sixth
warmest February ever recorded.
Also, as far as
temperature changes across the year are concerned, in the polar regions right at the
surface, the main
warming will be in the winter
months.
The last time global
surface temperatures warmed at the minimal rate of 0.03 deg C per decade for a 196 -
month period was about 1980.
In the Virginian ecoregion, stratification and
surface warming begin earlier in the year, and summer
temperatures exceed 20 °C for many
months [26].
The least - squares linear - regression trend on the RSS satellite monthly global mean
surface temperature anomaly dataset continues to show no global
warming for 18 years 9
months since February 1997, though one - third of all anthropogenic forcings have occurred during the period of the Pause.
Over the last
month or so
warm sea -
surface temperature [SST] and upper - ocean heat content anomalies have increased in the near - equatorial central Pacific, while the SST cool tongue in the near - equatorial far - eastern Pacific has weakened, with
warm anomalies now evident there.