Coolest summer on record in the US

Started by taxed, July 28, 2014, 04:27:28 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

taxed

Global warming is so out of control that it's getting cold!

Where's Sci Fi Fan when you need him?!!?!

http://stevengoddard.wordpress.com/2014/07/26/coolest-summer-on-record-in-the-us/
#PureBlood #TrumpWon

Solar

And those readings taken were stations being effected by islanding temperatures, meaning it's actually getting colder than the report alludes to.
Yes boiz and goilz, the planet is cooling, it's in a natural cycle with the sun, and no, it has absolutely nothing to do with man.
Official Trump Cult Member

#WWG1WGA

Q PATRIOT!!!

keyboarder

Quote from: taxed on July 28, 2014, 04:27:28 AM
Global warming is so out of control that it's getting cold!

Where's Sci Fi Fan when you need him?!!?!

http://stevengoddard.wordpress.com/2014/07/26/coolest-summer-on-record-in-the-us/

Sci Fi Fan is most likely running around still trying to find that Upstate forum he helped to shut down with his nonsense.  Seems he can't get away with his stuff on a normal forum.   :ohmy:
.If you want to lead the orchestra, you must turn your back to the crowd      Forbes

mdgiles

Well when the ice age arrives, all that water locked up in ice will cause the sea level to drop. I propose that we move to those territories exposed - which used to be 300 hundred feet under water - and not allow the AGW types to come with us. They can stay in their original homes, waiting for that global warming they were always warning us about. Of course the mile, or two, of ice over their heads might make living difficult; but hey, they're so much smarter than the rest of us, they'll figure out a way/sarc.  :rolleyes:
"LIBERALS: their willful ignorance is rivaled only by their catastrophic stupidity"!

keyboarder

BTW, I forgot to mention that this is the coolest AUGUST we've had in many years.  We start off today with temps in the mid nineties, followed by mild eighties the rest of this week.  I don't know when temps have ever been this low in August.  It is usually sultry and temps somewhere in the mid nineties to over 100 deg.  I'm not complaining though, it is a welcome reprieve.
.If you want to lead the orchestra, you must turn your back to the crowd      Forbes

drjim893

Just courious...is the US part of the entire planet or a stand-alone location?

If it is part of the overall planet then what would always be of greater importance is what is happening to the planet, which we share, like it or not, with the other 7 billion people and the residents of nature.

Given that reality, here is the 2013 report:

2013 was the fifth warmest year on record.

USA Today, 9/17/13.

keyboarder

Quote from: drjim893 on July 28, 2014, 08:16:42 AM
Just courious...is the US part of the entire planet or a stand-alone location?

If it is part of the overall planet then what would always be of greater importance is what is happening to the planet, which we share, like it or not, with the other 7 billion people and the residents of nature.

Given that reality, here is the 2013 report:

2013 was the fifth warmest year on record.

USA Today, 9/17/13.

The original article posted by Taxed is from the summer months of 2014.
Please try to keep up.  Thanx-Key

And, BTW, the comment posted by Solar does take into account the rest of the planet. 
.If you want to lead the orchestra, you must turn your back to the crowd      Forbes

taxed

Quote from: drjim893 on July 28, 2014, 08:16:42 AM
Just courious...is the US part of the entire planet or a stand-alone location?

If it is part of the overall planet then what would always be of greater importance is what is happening to the planet, which we share, like it or not, with the other 7 billion people and the residents of nature.

Given that reality, here is the 2013 report:

2013 was the fifth warmest year on record.

USA Today, 9/17/13.

Link please.
#PureBlood #TrumpWon

drjim893

Globe swelters through 5th-warmest summer on record

The world had its fifth-warmest summer since records began in 1880, the National Climatic Data Center reported Tuesday.

Specifically, the temperature over global land and ocean surfaces tied with 2009 as the fifth-highest on record at 61.22 degrees, which is 1.12 degree above the 20th-century average of 60.1 degrees.

Unusual heat was experienced worldwide:

• South Korea had its warmest summer since records began in 1973.

• Austria had its sixth-warmest June-August since records began in 1767.

• In the U.S., Alaska had its 2nd-warmest summer since records began in 1918.

• The average maximum temperature across Australia during June-August was 2.56 degrees Fahrenheit above average, the 2nd-highest since records began in 1910.

Climatologists call "summer" the three hottest months, which are June, July and August in the Northern Hemisphere. (Those three months are the winter months in the Southern Hemisphere.) The climate center is part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

One of the world's few cooler-than-average spots included the central and southeastern U.S.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/weather/2013/09/17/global-summer-climate-report/2828215/

And, adding to the thread comment on this summer:

U.S. enjoys coolest summer since 2009

After a series of sweltering summers, the USA caught a small break this year with its "coolest" summer since 2009, the National Climatic Data Center reported Thursday.

However, the nation as a whole was still 1 degree Fahrenheit warmer than the long-term average and experienced its 15th-warmest summer on record. Eight states in the West and four states in the Northeast had one of their 10 hottest summers on record, the climate center noted.

Alaska had its second-hottest summer in the state's 96-year record. The only other summer that was warmer was in 2004.http://www.usatoday.com/story/weather/2013/09/12/cool-summer-climate-report/2805667/

Climate scientists define summer as the three warmest months of June, July and August.


Just thought you would prefer all the pertinent facts.

taxed

Quote from: drjim893 on July 28, 2014, 08:47:02 AM
Globe swelters through 5th-warmest summer on record

The world had its fifth-warmest summer since records began in 1880, the National Climatic Data Center reported Tuesday.

Specifically, the temperature over global land and ocean surfaces tied with 2009 as the fifth-highest on record at 61.22 degrees, which is 1.12 degree above the 20th-century average of 60.1 degrees.

Unusual heat was experienced worldwide:

• South Korea had its warmest summer since records began in 1973.

• Austria had its sixth-warmest June-August since records began in 1767.

• In the U.S., Alaska had its 2nd-warmest summer since records began in 1918.

• The average maximum temperature across Australia during June-August was 2.56 degrees Fahrenheit above average, the 2nd-highest since records began in 1910.

Climatologists call "summer" the three hottest months, which are June, July and August in the Northern Hemisphere. (Those three months are the winter months in the Southern Hemisphere.) The climate center is part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

One of the world's few cooler-than-average spots included the central and southeastern U.S.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/weather/2013/09/17/global-summer-climate-report/2828215/

And, adding to the thread comment on this summer:

U.S. enjoys coolest summer since 2009

After a series of sweltering summers, the USA caught a small break this year with its "coolest" summer since 2009, the National Climatic Data Center reported Thursday.

However, the nation as a whole was still 1 degree Fahrenheit warmer than the long-term average and experienced its 15th-warmest summer on record. Eight states in the West and four states in the Northeast had one of their 10 hottest summers on record, the climate center noted.

Alaska had its second-hottest summer in the state's 96-year record. The only other summer that was warmer was in 2004.http://www.usatoday.com/story/weather/2013/09/12/cool-summer-climate-report/2805667/

Climate scientists define summer as the three warmest months of June, July and August.


Just thought you would prefer all the pertinent facts.

USA Today didn't link to the data.  Again, can you please link to the report?
#PureBlood #TrumpWon

Solar

Quote from: taxed on July 28, 2014, 08:53:38 AM
USA Today didn't link to the data.  Again, can you please link to the report?
Link to opinion? :lol:
USA Today rag is notorious for this kind of bull shit.
Official Trump Cult Member

#WWG1WGA

Q PATRIOT!!!

drjim893

Taxed,

The "link" is the articles author, Doyle Rice.
If you have doubts google his claims. Should only take a minute.

taxed

Quote from: drjim893 on July 28, 2014, 08:59:53 AM
Taxed,

The "link" is the articles author, Doyle Rice.
If you have doubts google his claims. Should only take a minute.

No it isn't.
#PureBlood #TrumpWon

TboneAgain

Quote from: drjim893 on July 28, 2014, 08:16:42 AM
Just courious...is the US part of the entire planet or a stand-alone location?

If it is part of the overall planet then what would always be of greater importance is what is happening to the planet, which we share, like it or not, with the other 7 billion people and the residents of nature.

Given that reality, here is the 2013 report:

2013 was the fifth warmest year on record.

USA Today, 9/17/13.

Of course this is proof positive that all the climate "models" are wrong. If any of them was right, 2013 would have been the warmest year on record, not the fifth warmest. Just sayin.
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people. -- Tenth Amendment to the US Constitution

Government is not reason; it is not eloquent; IT IS FORCE. -- George Washington

walkstall

Quote from: taxed on July 28, 2014, 08:53:38 AM
USA Today didn't link to the data.  Again, can you please link to the report?

Quote5th-warmest summer on record
So
QuoteJune, July and August
is what summer is all about.  What next 2 months or just one.   :lol: 
A politician thinks of the next election. A statesman, of the next generation.- James Freeman Clarke

Always remember "Feelings Aren't Facts."