Showing posts with label weather. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weather. Show all posts

Thursday, January 7, 2010

- 18 C............

CARSHALTON BEECHES, UNITED KINGDOM - JANUARY 0...Image by Getty Images via Daylife

Snow UK: what happens when it hits -18C

What happens when temperatures drop to -18C

 
Benson, Oxfordshire, which recorded a low of minus 17.7 degrees centigrade overnight
Benson, Oxfordshire, which recorded a low of minus 17.7 degrees centigrade overnightPhoto: PA
1. -18C is the recommended temperature at which to keep a household freezer
2. It is 0 farenheit.
3. It is the temperature at which table salt can no longer be used to melt ice
4. It is the temperature at which sunflower oil freezes
5. -18°C is the average temperature for this time of year in Irkutsk, Siberia.
6. It is also the average temperature at the summit of Mount Everest during July.
7. If the earth had no atmosphere at all, its surface temperature would be approximately -18C

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Thursday, December 10, 2009

Al Gore

BERLIN - OCTOBER 23:  Al Gore, former US vice ...Image by Getty Images via Daylife
Al Gore should know better.

He's now attacking the Global Warming sceptics in a more openly personal way than ever before. He used to be tolerant of opposing views. Not any longer.

What is the truth behind climate change, changing weather patterns, extremes in flooding and drought?

It's not easy to decipher given the different views of eminent scientists in both camps but when Al Gore joins the fray the waters just get muddier!
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Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Why is the weather so extreme?
WNC researchers plot wild swings of temperature, precipitation
by Dale Neal
published March 13, 2008 12:15 am

Asheville – With a balmy winter, a deep Easter freeze, hailstorms in June, a scalding heat wave in August and a yearlong exceptional drought, 2007 in Western North Carolina saw a host of weather extremes.
But the mountains weren’t alone. Nationwide, last year saw more extreme weather than any year except 1998, according to the U.S. Climate Index. The index, which extends back to 1910, has seen a trend toward more heat waves, deep freezes, intense storms and droughts affecting more of the nation over the past five years, according to Richard Heim, a meteorologist at the National Climatic Data Center in downtown Asheville.

“As far as extremes, we’ve been really up there since the 1980s,” Heim said. Whether hot or cold, wet or dry, “we’re having more extreme weather at both ends.”
Developed in the 1990s by researchers, including current NCDC director Thomas Karl, the index is a composite of weather extremes affecting the continental United States, showing whether a heat wave or a cold snap affects wide swaths of the nation.
Last year was the 10th-warmest on record for the nation, marked by deadly wildfires in California, spring storms that sent 600 tornadoes spinning across the Great Plains and South, severe flooding in Texas and Oklahoma, and a devastating drought across North Carolina and much of the Southeast.
While the index itself isn’t a forecasting tool, those extremes could be tied to the climate change scientists charted in last year’s landmark reports from the Nobel Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Those reports indicate that rising global temperatures could lead to more weather extremes with heavier rainstorms and perhaps more intense hurricane activity.
“Climate change is always happening, but man has reached a point where we are one of the controllers of climate change,” Heim said.
Civilizations and cultures changed along with the climate when droughts or colder temperatures in the Middle Ages disrupted agriculture and brought famine, Heim said. “A changing climate is not something you want to ignore. Decision-makers ought to be concerned.”
On the regional level, researchers at the Renaissance Computing Institute at UNC Asheville are trying to give planners more tools to work with in the event of future extreme weather, such as storms that could produce severe flooding like that along the Swannanoa and French Broad rivers in 2004.
Predicting weather is hard in the mountains, given the numerous microclimates, said Jim Fox, who heads the research group that’s part of RENCI.
“You look at Asheville, and it’s the driest part of the whole state. Down in Transylvania County is the wettest part of the state, and there’s not that much of a drive between Asheville and Brevard,” Fox said.
RENCI is using money from the state to place more rain and stream gauges around Western North Carolina to provide more local data.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

The Tipping Point.......

Scientists identify 'tipping points' of climate change

By Steve Connor, Science EditorTuesday, 5 February 2008


Nine ways in which the Earth could be tipped into a potentially dangerous state that could last for many centuries have been identified by scientists investigating how quickly global warming could run out of control.
A major international investigation by dozens of leading climate scientists has found that the "tipping points" for all nine scenarios – such as the melting of the Arctic sea ice or the disappearance of the Amazon rainforest – could occur within the next 100 years.
The scientists warn that climate change is likely to result in sudden and dramatic changes to some of the major geophysical elements of the Earth if global average temperatures continue to rise as a result of the predicted increase in emissions of man-made greenhouse gases.
Most and probably all of the nine scenarios are likely to be irreversible on a human timescale once they pass a certain threshold of change, and the widespread effects of the transition to the new state will be felt for generations to come, the scientists said.
"Society may be lulled into a false sense of security by smooth projections of global change. Our synthesis of present knowledge suggests that a variety of tipping elements could reach their critical point within this century under anthropogenic [man-made] climate change," they report in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The study came out of a 2005 meeting of 36 leading climate scientists who drew on the expertise of a further 52 specialists. It is believed to be the first time that scientists have attempted to assess the risks of what they have termed "tipping elements" in the Earth's climate system.
The nine elements range from the melting of polar ice sheets to the collapse of the Indian and West African monsoons. The effects of the changes could be equally varied, from a dramatic rise in sea levels that flood coastal regions to widespread crop failures and famine. Some of the tipping points may be close at hand, such as the point at which the disappearance of the summer sea ice in the Arctic becomes inevitable, whereas others, such as the tipping point for the destruction of northern boreal forests, may take several more decades to be reached.
While scenarios such as the collapse of the Indian monsoon could occur within a few years, others, such as the melting of the Greenland ice cap or the West Antarctic ice sheet, may take several centuries to complete. "Our findings suggest that a variety of tipping elements could reach their critical point in this century under human-induced climate change," said Professor Timothy Lenton, of the University of East Anglia, who led the study.
A tipping point is defined as the point where a small increase in temperature or other change in the climate could trigger a disproportionately larger change in the future. Although there are many potential tipping points that could occur this century, it is still possible to avoid them with cuts in greenhouse gases, said Professor Lenton.
He added: "But we should be prepared to adapt ... and to design an early-warning system that alerts us to them in time."
Irreversible changes
* Arctic sea ice: some scientists believe that the tipping point for the total loss of summer sea ice is imminent.
* Greenland ice sheet: total melting could take 300 years or more but the tipping point that could see irreversible change might occur within 50 years.
* West Antarctic ice sheet: scientists believe it could unexpectedly collapse if it slips into the sea at its warming edges.
* Gulf Stream: few scientists believe it could be switched off completely this century but its collapse is a possibility.
* El NiƱo: the southern Pacific current may be affected by warmer seas, resulting in far-reaching climate change.
* Indian monsoon: relies on temperature difference between land and sea, which could be tipped off-balance by pollutants that cause localised cooling.
* West African monsoon: in the past it has changed, causing the greening of the Sahara, but in the future it could cause droughts.
* Amazon rainforest: a warmer world and further deforestation may cause a collapse of the rain supporting this ecosystem.
* Boreal forests: cold-adapted trees of Siberia and Canada are dying as temperatures rise.
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Monday, February 18, 2008

Breaking news today ~ Cold Weather hits China again........

180,000 stranded in southern China as cold weather returns: report
8 hours ago ~ 18th February 2008


BEIJING (AFP) — Freezing weather has again swept through southern China, leaving 180,000 people stranded and causing power outages, just as the region was recovering from the last cold snap, state press said Monday.
The latest cold weather has taken a severe toll in mountainous Yunnan province, where heavy snowfalls since Thursday have caused huge problems, the China Daily said.
Eighty percent of the two million residents in Qujing city remain without electricity due to the combined impacts of the most recent cold snap and the ferocious weather that first hit southern China in early January.
The snowfalls over the past few days have also blocked 14,000 kilometres (8,700 miles) of roads in Yunnan, a prime reason behind the large number of people stranded, the China Daily said, citing provincial transport authorities.
In Qujing, the second biggest city in Yunnan, six highways have been closed while 42 bus routes have been cancelled, according to the paper.

Yunnan was one of the areas hit hard by the cold snap in January and early February, which was the worst winter weather seen in the region in more than 50 years.

The weather led to the deaths of at least 107 people and caused more than 15 billion dollars in economic losses, according to official figures released last week.

Ice and snowfalls crippled power and transport networks, with authorities admitting they were unprepared for the ferocity of the weather.

Rain & Flooding hits Commuters in US

Rain, flooding slams morning commute
BY JOHN VALENTI john.valenti@newsday.com
7:29 AM EST, February 18, 2008


The bad news is that we're in for some terrible weather throughout the day Monday: Rain showers. A possible thunderstorm. Areas of dense fog. The possibility of flooding.The good news is that's it's President's Day. Meaning that traffic is light and many people have the day off -- so there are no mind-numbing morning rush-hour traffic jams.Still, the National Weather Service is advising that moderate rain will continue throughout the day with "brief periods" of heavy rainfall. Areas of fog will result in "very low visibilities with hazardous driving conditions," forecasters warn.

Men trying to fish on Frozen river in China


Snow in Athens


Something very odd is happening to the weather ~ Snow in Athens???????????