Maps & Data

Data Snapshots (Images)

Browse a range of easy-to-understand climate maps in a single interface.

Climate Data Mapper (Interactive)

Visualize climate data via an interactive web map.

Climate Data Primer

Find out about measuring, modeling, and predicting climate and ways to find and use climate data.

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Browse stories about the ‘climate behind the weather’ in this interactive map of current events found in our News and Features department.

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Long-term sea level change trends at 100+ U.S. locations. Blue, upward arrows show where local sea level is rising. Brown, downward arrows show where local sea level is falling.

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This interactive map shows the latest day for which snow greater than 0.1 inches was recorded for thousands of U.S. weather stations during their period of operation (up through April 11 of 2018).

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Interactive table and map showing state- and county-specific drought impacts ranked by U.S. Drought Monitor categories, including impacts to industry, natural resources, and human health.

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Compare projected changes in downhill ski season length by 2050 if we follow a moderate versus a high pathway of carbon emissions.

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To highlight spring’s extremes, here are maps of the warmest and coolest first day of spring (March 19) recorded at thousands of U.S. weather stations during each station’s history.

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Interactive map showing the average annual coldest winter temperatures across the contiguous U.S. divided into 10-degree "planting zone" bins for 1971-2000, 1981-2010, and the shift between the two.

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What are the chances of rain on the Fourth of July? This map shows the historic probability of there being of at least 0.1 inch of rain on the July 4 based on the latest U.S. Climate Normals from NOAA NCEI.

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Heat maps and matching satellite images presented with a slider, so that readers can get a sense of how and why each city experiences such a wide range of temperatures on a hot summer day.

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This Storymap provides access to a collection of "stripes" graphics, in which a location's yearly temperature and precipitation conditions since 1895 are shown as a simple row of colored stripes without dates or numbers.

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Grab and drag the slider to compare the warmest and coldest first days of summer recorded at thousands of U.S. locations.

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Compare the Anza-Borrego Desert basin before and after abundant winter rains. The park is all bare ground in early fall, but following the rains, green coats the canyon floors and the surrounding hillsides.

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Global Climate Dashboard

Tracking climate change and natural variability over time

In 2021, the combined heating influence of all human-produced greenhouse gases was 49 percent higher than it was in 1990.

Since the start of the satellite era in 1979, the extent of ice covering the Arctic Ocean at the end of summer has shrunk by more than 40 percent.

The amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has risen more than 45 percent since people began burning fossil fuels for energy. It hit a new high of 414.7 parts per million in 2021.

Since 1980, the cumulative ice loss from a reference network of mountain glaciers is equivalent to slicing an 87-foot-thick slab off each glacier. The rate of loss is roughly doubling each decade.

Averaged over the full depth of the ocean, the global ocean gained an estimated 0.58-0.78 watts of heat energy per square meter from 1993–2020, contributing to sea level rise, ice shelf retreat, and stress on coral reefs.

Sea level has risen between 8 and 9 inches since 1880. The rate of sea level rise more than doubled from 2006–2015 compared to the rate throughout most of the twentieth century.

Since 1967, spring snow cover has shrunk by 1.4 percent per decade in April, 4.1 percent per decade in May, and 12.9 percent per decade in June.

The sun’s total brightness varies by an average of 0.1 percent over an 11-year cycle, but there has been very little net change over the last century.

Global average surface temperature has risen 0.14 degrees Fahrenheit per decade since 1880. The rate of warming has more than doubled since 1981.