Beyond the Data Blog
Last week’s Beyond the Data post examined the extreme temperature climates in the United States, as defined by station “normals.” We promised to come back and look at the precipitation extremes, and here we are.
First, a reminder: this information, for a subset of about 450 stations across the United States, is available through this tool. We’ve left the settings at the default “don’t give me stations within 20 miles of each other” setting. Jump in and play with the data yourself!
The Wettest and Driest Places in America
The tables below list the ten wettest and ten driest locations in the United States. Again, these are annual normals, or what would be expected in the mythica…
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We’ve been going Beyond the Data for a year and a half now (time flies!). Sometimes, on a long journey, it’s good to revisit the basics. What got us here?
That’s the theme for this edition. We’re going old school, and just look at some good old climatology adages and truisms, through the lens of a sturdy, reliable warhorse of a dataset.
One question that we get here at NCEI’s Center for Weather and Climate, more so than you might think, are questions about superlatives. “What is the hottest place in America?” and so on. I call these the “Mostest Questions.”
To respond to these recurring questions, we set up a handy viewer that helps describe just that. Today’s edition of Beyond the …
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Near the anniversary of Beyond the Data's most popular post, we've given the map an interactive upgrade. Click to zoom in on an area of interest and drill down to see the date by which the chances for the first snow of the season at your location rise to at least 50%. Will this year's first snow come earlier or later than the historic "first date" of snow? See what the climate record has to say and keep up with your local forecast.
This map shows the historic date by which there’s a 50% chance of at least 0.1” of snow on the ground, based on each location’s snowfall history from 1981-2010, based on the latest U.S. Climate Normals from NOAA's National Centers for Environmental Informat…
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By now, you’ve probably heard that July was the warmest month on record for the planet’s surface. We live in a warming world and with that comes a surge in global-scale temperature. In my office, though, we often remind each other that nobody was harmed by “global average temperature.” It’s an important indicator of change, to be sure, but the consequences of a warming world show up locally.
One such consequence came to light in July, the warmest month of Earth’s recent history: an anthrax outbreak in western Siberia. The outbreak was traced, at least preliminarily, to a reindeer carcass that had thawed after being frozen for several decades.
I won’t pretend to know all the details or …
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It might seem strange to be talking about Northern Hemisphere Snow cover during the heat of summer, but July 1st was “Snow New Year”: the end of the 2015-16 meteorological snow year and the start of the 2016-17 “snow year.” As most people do at the start of a new year, we’re reflecting on events from the past year to understand where we have been and where we might be going. In this Beyond the Data blog post, we will dig deeper into the Northern Hemisphere snow cover extent during the 2015-16 snow season and explore change in snow cover over time.
History of snow mapping
To understand Northern Hemisphere snow cover extent, it helps to examine its history. Thanks to the hard work …
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