|
Post by blustnmtn on Mar 2, 2022 15:24:52 GMT
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on Mar 2, 2022 17:15:10 GMT
And this effectively brings us back to "Pause" levels that extended from ~1998. Nearly 25 years (with a 5-year bump at the end) of no net global temperature increase. How the believers will howl and knash their teeth. Dr Roy and his crew have provided a great service with his 43-year lower troposphere data base. We will see how far this drops as the Nina ebbs. My guess is it will gradually rise across the high phase of SC25 and decline again from a temporary high that will be in line with the baseline 2016 - 2022 decline.
Earth's Average Temperature Drops To 30-Year Baseline, Down 0.71C Since 2016 Peak
|
|
|
Post by code on Mar 29, 2022 11:14:04 GMT
|
|
|
Post by acidohm on Apr 3, 2022 7:19:54 GMT
UAH March is in...
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on Apr 3, 2022 12:44:44 GMT
So, two months on, it would appear that Hunga Tonga has had no appreciable effect on global troposphere temperatures.
|
|
|
Post by nonentropic on Apr 3, 2022 18:55:17 GMT
It was particulates not SO4.
Further its not over a big proportion of the temperature rise was the wobbly polar temperatures, they tend to overstate the global average when they are high (water content issue)
The "atmospheric river" in the Antarctic was a major exothermic release of latent energy as the air rose on to the high frozen plateau. That energy is now in space never to return watch next month!
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on Aug 2, 2022 21:33:58 GMT
Big spike in UAH LT global temp anomaly to +0.36. Waiting on Tropical LT anomaly. I expect a smaller spike.
|
|
|
Post by douglavers on Aug 2, 2022 22:30:25 GMT
I keep wondering about these satellite measurements.
Arctic: Cold Antarctic: Cold South America: Cold Southern Africa: Cold: Australia: Cold
La Nina: In full swing
So where is there enough "hot" to push the global average up O.3 DegC in one month?
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on Aug 3, 2022 16:32:30 GMT
I keep wondering about these satellite measurements. Arctic: Cold Antarctic: Cold South America: Cold Southern Africa: Cold: Australia: Cold La Nina: In full swing So where is there enough "hot" to push the global average up O.3 DegC in one month? Could be that those plumes of oceanic heat in the western Pacific and North Atlantic are busy rapidly releasing "heat" into the troposphere as they adjust to the overall cooling conditions of a second low solar cycle. We will miss them when they are gone.
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on Aug 7, 2022 21:25:24 GMT
UAH tropic anomaly went up to +0.13 from July's -0.36 ... a change of +0.49C. This mirrors the global change and is the 2nd or 3rd largest month-to-month positive change in the whole time series. No clue.
|
|
|
Post by blustnmtn on Aug 10, 2022 12:20:49 GMT
|
|
|
Post by ratty on Aug 10, 2022 14:18:40 GMT
UAH tropic anomaly went up to +0.13 from July's -0.36 ... a change of +0.49C. This mirrors the global change and is the 2nd or 3rd largest month-to-month positive change in the whole time series. No clue. Roy's been bought?
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on Aug 10, 2022 15:51:25 GMT
UAH tropic anomaly went up to +0.13 from July's -0.36 ... a change of +0.49C. This mirrors the global change and is the 2nd or 3rd largest month-to-month positive change in the whole time series. No clue. Roy's been bought? After all these years? I'm not buying it.
|
|
|
Post by ratty on Aug 10, 2022 16:34:59 GMT
After all these years? I'm not buying it. Don't forget the UAH Shooting.
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on Aug 19, 2022 22:30:39 GMT
Northern Hemisphere early summer snow, where none living remember it. But you won't see it in the press.
“Severe Summer Snowfall” Drives Mass Livestock Death In Northern India And Pakistan
One I missed from June–thank you to a reader for pointing it out: Every spring, some 300,000 livestock are herded up to Kashmir’s Neelum valley to graze on the abundance of summer. This year, however, herders were met by severe summer snow.
In late-June, 4 feet of snow accumulated across the Neelum Valley, killing thousands of livestock–mainly goats.
“We lost 107 goats due to the June snowfall”, said one herder from Mansehra, in Pakistan, who, along with two fellow farmers walked their 650 goats and sheep some 200km to the pastures at Ratti Galli in the Neelum Valley.
“We were not expecting snowfall, nor was there any prior warning,” said the herder.
Another herder with 1,025 sheep and goats lost 240 animals, mostly goats, to the summer snow. But as well as the cold and snow itself, the inclement conditions brought other unseasonal dangers: “Some of our goats were killed by local bears that normally stay on top of the mountains but come down during winter snowfalls,” he said.
This year, however, the usually safe summer refuge was hit by rare blizzards that brought heavy losses to the herders. It snowed constantly between 19 and 22 June, coating the lush green meadows with a layer of snow some 3 feet deep, according to the shepherds — an incident that the administration of Jammu and Kashmir declared a State Specific Natural Disaster.
“I have lived all the summers of my life in these mountains. It had never happened before, that it would snow in June,” said herder Assadulla Chopan, who had traveled to the pasture with his 1,600-strong flock of sheep in early-June.
|
|