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Post by missouriboy on Nov 1, 2021 17:38:14 GMT
The UAH Global temperature anomaly for the lower troposphere went up again in October to +0.37 C. The September tropical anomaly held steady while the global increased. I expect the tropics to decline this month, followed by the globe next month. We will see. Drip, drip, drip ... I doubt that anyone at COP26 will make any mention of how scary +0.37 C actually is.
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Post by acidohm on Dec 2, 2021 18:10:17 GMT
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Post by ratty on Dec 3, 2021 0:34:42 GMT
Thermal inertia beginning to retreat?
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Post by missouriboy on Dec 3, 2021 0:45:45 GMT
Thermal inertia beginning to retreat? Like a rectal thermometer reading on the very recently deceased.
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Post by nonentropic on Dec 3, 2021 1:31:38 GMT
We kind of got it before your graphic analog MB.
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Post by missouriboy on Dec 7, 2021 21:51:34 GMT
Looking at the UAH lower troposphere temperature anomalies for areas over the Northern and Southern Hemisphere Oceans and the Polar Oceans from 1979 to 2021. Note the essentially flat trend for oceans surrounding the South Pole, versus the very large increase for oceans surrounding the North Pole, with a dramatic upward break in 1995. The Northern and Southern Hemisphere Oceans lie in between the extremes. The dramatic increase in Northern Hemisphere lower troposphere anomalies above the North Pole Oceans is reasonably coincident with the AMO, but the entire NH ocean area also shows a large increase in the same time frame (with a lag), and the Pacific portion of the NH is much larger than the Atlantic.
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