Record setting weather

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Re: Record setting weather

Postby conniption » Sun Dec 15, 2013 5:23 am

RT

‘Once-in-a-century storm’ turns Gaza, Israel into ‘disaster area’
Published time: December 14, 2013

A UN agency has designated Gaza a “disaster area,” after the Levant’s strongest storm in decades forced 5,000 Palestinians to evacuate their homes. Israel has also suffered weather-related fatalities and blackouts.

"Large swathes of northern Gaza are a disaster area with water as far as the eye can see,"

United Nations Relief Works Agency (UNRWA) said in a statement.

Storm Alexa has been causing torrential downpours and heavy snowfall across Syria, Israel, Palestine, and even the deserts of the Sinai Peninsula for the past four days. Israeli meteorologists have deemed the storm the region’s worst snowfall since 1879.

Image
A member of the Palestinian civil defense paddles a boat as he evacuates a man and his children after their house was flooded with rainwater on a stormy day in the northern Gaza Strip December 14, 2013. (Reuters / Mohammed Salem)

Gaza, which already suffers from poor infrastructure and scheduled blackouts due to a fuel shortage, has been particularly hard hit by floods, exacerbated by poor drainage and shoddy building construction.

UNRWA says areas around Jebaliya, a large refugee camp in the north of the territory, "have become a massive lake with two-meter-high waters engulfing homes and stranding thousands."

The Red Cross has been giving out aid packages, while UNRWA is distributing fuel supplies to those suffering from the floods. Earlier, Israel opened its tightly-controlled border to let in heating fuel and water pumps.

Emergency workers have paddled rafts between houses to offer supplies, and to evacuate the weak and elderly, who have been placed in nearby schools and other public buildings.

Image
Members of a Palestinian family travel on a boat after being evacuated from their house which was flooded with rainwater on a stormy day in the northern Gaza Strip December 14, 2013. (Reuters / Mohammed Salem)

At least 100 people have suffered injuries during the storm, mostly in car accidents and as a result of debris falling from collapsing houses.

Across the border, some parts of Israel have seen snow accumulate to over three feet.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the cataclysm a “once-in-a-century storm” during a parliamentary debate on the government’s response to the freak weather.

More than 50,000 households - predominantly in Jerusalem – have been left without electricity after more than 600 power lines collapsed, Haaretz reported.

Image
Palestinian policemen loyal to Hamas ride a boat as members of a Palestinian family travel on a boat after being evacuated from their house that is flooded with rainwater on a stormy day in the northern Gaza Strip December 14, 2013. (Reuters / Mohammed Salem)

A man died on Saturday evening after slipping off his roof while trying to fix a leak. Police have located the bodies of two young men whose 4 x 4 was caught in flash flood in the desert earlier this week.

The Ayalon Highway out of Tel Aviv is the latest to be sealed off due to dangerous flooding. Several other motorways have been closed for days.

On working public roads, traffic jams have reached up to ten hours, and police say over 200 drivers had to be rescued across the country overnight.

The Israeli Defence Force has used its bulldozers to clear the roads, and the government provided trains on Saturday, lifting a ban on public transport in force during the Jewish day of worship.

Image
Ultra-orthodox Jews walk in a street of Jerusalem on December 13, 2013 following a snowstorm.(AFP Photo / Menahem Kahana)
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Re: Record setting weather

Postby Iamwhomiam » Mon Dec 16, 2013 7:01 pm

Supposed to be +2F tonight after a week of frigid weather and a whopping snowfall. 150 mile north of NYC.
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Re: Record setting weather

Postby conniption » Sat May 17, 2014 2:58 pm

RT

Record Balkan floods: Over 20 killed, tens of thousands forced to flee (PHOTOS)

Published time: May 17, 2014

More than 20 people have been killed in what has been branded the worst flooding on record across the Balkans. Tens of thousands have been evacuated and 250,000 homes are without power.

The death toll has reached 19 in Bosnia alone, including nine people found on Saturday when waters receded from the northeastern town of Doboj, Reuters reported. Authorities have warned that more bodies could emerge as waters recede in dozens of cities flooded over the past three days. Serbia has seen eight deaths, AP reported.

"This is the greatest flooding disaster ever. Not just in the past 100 years; this has never happened in Serbia's history," Serbia's Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic told a news conference on Thursday.

"More rain fell in one day than in four months," he added.

continued...
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Re: Record setting weather

Postby Nordic » Sat May 17, 2014 10:34 pm

Here in southern California we just had a nasty and brutish heat wave completely out of character for May. Now San Diego has caught on fire. Usually these heat waves and fires only happen in the fall. To have them in the spring is very very weird.

Also the drought here is really bad. We had almost zero rain during our "rainy season". It felt like we were in Arizona instead of California.

Anecdotal yes but seems to be part of a larger pattern.
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Re: Record setting weather

Postby Project Willow » Sun May 18, 2014 1:05 am

It's been unseasonably warm and dry in Seattle too.

Meteorologists say a massive area of warm water in the Pacific is affecting temperatures and may lead to the biggest El Nino pattern ever recorded.

Image

http://www.slate.com/blogs/future_tense/2014/04/07/el_nino_2014_2015_forecasts_show_it_could_grow_into_a_monster.html
As I wrote last fall, the coming El Niño could be enough to make 2014 the hottest year in recorded history, and 2015 could be even warmer than that. The 1997-98 super El Niño was enough to boost global temperatures by nearly a quarter of a degree Celsius. If that scale of warming happens again, the world could approach a 1ºC departure from pre-industrial times as early as next year. As climate scientist James Hansen has warned, that’s around the highest that temperatures have ever been since human civilization began.
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Re: Record setting weather

Postby 82_28 » Sun May 18, 2014 2:02 am

Project Willow » Sat May 17, 2014 9:05 pm wrote:It's been unseasonably warm and dry in Seattle too.

Meteorologists say a massive area of warm water in the Pacific is affecting temperatures and may lead to the biggest El Nino pattern ever recorded.

Image

http://www.slate.com/blogs/future_tense/2014/04/07/el_nino_2014_2015_forecasts_show_it_could_grow_into_a_monster.html
As I wrote last fall, the coming El Niño could be enough to make 2014 the hottest year in recorded history, and 2015 could be even warmer than that. The 1997-98 super El Niño was enough to boost global temperatures by nearly a quarter of a degree Celsius. If that scale of warming happens again, the world could approach a 1ºC departure from pre-industrial times as early as next year. As climate scientist James Hansen has warned, that’s around the highest that temperatures have ever been since human civilization began.


But you do have to admit that Seattle and environs has totally been the most "normal" in North America this last year, if not the last two. In some ways the PNW is becoming the more dark but similarly matched climate of legacy SoCal. By "dark" I mean daylight and all that. At least here in the city I believe it has gotten below freezing twice in the last two years. A couple of years before that we had that crazy freeze that I totally feared that we would lose all of our less hardy plants and then we had that 104 degree day. These last two years have been tranquil as hell.
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Re: Record setting weather

Postby Project Willow » Sun May 18, 2014 12:16 pm

Agree, we've been lucky to avoid extremes, but then some extremes are somewhat normal for us too, like the windstorms in November, which haven't been as bad in recent years. The weather patterns are definitely changing, and yes, it seems we're becoming more like our neighbors to the South.

I miss how generally predictable the seasons used to be, rain and cool temperatures until right around July 5, then two months of summer drought that ended promptly around labor day weekend. We'd get some weeks of sun in October, colder temps in December, and Jan, otherwise light rain and cloud cover for months on end. The rains are heavier now and more sporadic. The sun feels hotter in the summer, and we get colder winter storms. Our summers are so glorious, perfect temperatures, bright sun shining on water and mountains for days on end. I'd hate to see them become unbearably hot like in other regions. What a shame.
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Re: Record setting weather

Postby 82_28 » Sun May 18, 2014 1:13 pm

I just realized I wrote "tranquil as hell".
There is no me. There is no you. There is all. There is no you. There is no me. And that is all. A profound acceptance of an enormous pageantry. A haunting certainty that the unifying principle of this universe is love. -- Propagandhi
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Re: Record setting weather

Postby coffin_dodger » Mon Jul 14, 2014 10:09 pm

Freak hailstorm hits Siberia beach

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-28299459
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Re: Record setting weather

Postby conniption » Mon Sep 22, 2014 1:41 am

chicagotribune

Summer of 2014 hottest on record, officially

By Deborah Netburn

If the summer of 2014 felt unusually warm to you, you were right -- at least on a global level.

From June through August of 2014, the average temperature of our planet was 62.78 degrees Fahrenheit -- 1.28 degrees higher than the 20th century average, according to a report by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

That makes it the warmest summer since record keeping began in 1880.

Image
A National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration chart shows which parts of the globe were warmer, and which were cooler, than average from June through August of 2014. (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.)

NOAA notes that the oceans contributed more to the warming trend than land temperatures this year.

The global ocean surface temperature was 1.13 degrees Fahrenheit above the 20th century average, and the highest on record for the three-month period. The global land surface temperature was 0.91 degree higher than average, which makes it the fifth highest on record.

The northern and southern hemispheres of the planet were hotter than usual during the months of June, July and August, but while record high temperatures were recorded in the northern hemisphere, the southern hemisphere (in its winter during this period) was the fifth warmest on record.

As you can see in the graphic above, not all of America suffered as we Southern Californians did this summer. Much of the East Coast and the Midwest experienced lower temperatures than average from June through August. Overall, the lower 48 states had its coolest summer since 2009.

NOAA report notes no specific global trends for precipitation around the planet. The three-month period saw many anomalies throughout the globe, but the authors of the report said that is not unusual. Here in the United States, the Lower 48 saw the ninth wettest summer on record, even as California suffered through an epic drought.

Overall, 2014 is not shaping up to be one of the hottest years we've ever seen. NOAA reports that the first eight months of 2014 were the third warmest on record for the same time period, with an average temperature of 58.53 degrees Fahrenheit.

Los Angeles Times
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Re: Record setting weather

Postby Luther Blissett » Mon Jan 25, 2016 10:57 am

The storm surge at the Jersey shore yesterday for "winter storm Jonas" was one foot higher than that for Hurricane Sandy.
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Re: Record setting weather

Postby seemslikeadream » Tue Jan 26, 2016 9:17 am

The last time Earth was this hot, hippos lived in Britain
Guys, 2015 was really warm.
EMMA STONE AND ALEX FARNSWORTH 25 JAN 2016

This article was written by Emma Stone and Alex Farnsworth from the University of Bristol, and was originally published by The Conversation.

It’s official: 2015 was the warmest year on record. But those global temperature records only date back to 1850 and become increasingly uncertain the further back you go. Beyond then, we’re reliant on signs left behind in tree rings, ice cores or rocks. So when was Earth last warmer than the present?

The Medieval Warm Period is often cited as the answer. This spell, beginning in roughly 950AD and lasting for three centuries, saw major changes to population centres across the globe. This included the collapse of the Tiwanaku civilisation in South America due to increased aridity, and the colonisation of Greenland by the Vikings.

But that doesn’t tell the whole story. Yes, some regions were warmer than in recent years, but others were substantially colder. Across the globe, averaged temperatures then were in fact cooler than today.

To reach a point when Earth was significantly warmer than today we’d need to go back 130,000 years, to a time known as the Eemian. For about 1.8 million years the planet had fluctuated between a series of ice ages and warmer periods known as 'interglacials'. The Eemian, which lasted around 15,000 years, was the most recent of these interglacials (before the one we’re currently in).

Although global annual average temperatures were approximately 1 to 2˚C warmer than preindustrial levels, high latitude regions were several degrees warmer still. This meant ice caps melted, Greenland’s ice sheet was reduced and the West Antarctic ice sheet may have collapsed. The sea level was at least 6 m higher than today.

Across Asia and North America forests extended much further north than today and straight-tusked elephants (now extinct) and hippopotamuses were living as far north as the British Isles.

How do we know all this? Well, scientists can estimate the temperature changes at this time by looking at chemicals found in ice cores and marine sediment cores and studying pollen buried in layers deep underground. Certain isotopes of oxygen and hydrogen in ice cores can determine the temperature in the past while pollen tells us which plant species were present and therefore gives us an indication of climatic conditions suitable for that species.

We know from air bubbles in ice cores drilled on Antarctica that greenhouse gas concentrations in the Eemian were not dissimilar to preindustrial levels. However orbital conditions were very different – essentially there were much larger latitudinal and seasonal variations in the amount of solar energy received by Earth.

So although the Eemian was warmer than today the driving mechanism for this warmth was fundamentally different to present-day climate change, which is down to greenhouses gases. To find a warm period caused predominantly by conditions more similar to today, we need to go even further back in time.

As climate scientists, we’re particularly interested in the Miocene (around 23 to 5.3 million years ago), and in particular a spell known as the Miocene-Climate Optimum (11-17 million years ago). Around this time CO2 values (350-400 parts per million) were similar to today and it therefore potentially serves as an appropriate analogue for the future.

During the Optimum, those carbon dioxide concentrations were the predominant driver of climate change. Global average temperatures were 2 to 4˚C warmer than preindustrial values, sea level was around 20 m higher and there was an expansion of tropical vegetation.

However, during the later Miocene period CO2 declined to below preindustrial levels, but global temperatures remained significantly warmer. What kept things warm, if not CO2? We still don’t know exactly - it may have been orbital shifts, the development of modern ocean circulation or even big geographical changes such as the Isthmus of Panama narrowing and eventually closing off - but it does mean direct comparison with the present day is problematic.

Currently orbital conditions are suitable to trigger the next glacial inception. We’re due another ice age. However, as pointed out in a recent study in Nature, there’s now so much carbon in the atmosphere the likelihood of this occurring is massively reduced over the next 100,000 years.
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Re: Record setting weather

Postby NeonLX » Tue Jan 26, 2016 10:04 am

Yay! No ice age! Our atmospheric CO2 and methane have saved the day (actually, saved the millennia)!
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Re: Record setting weather

Postby Iamwhomiam » Tue Jan 26, 2016 4:29 pm

Rest assured, Neon, this old fossil will be there to support you when you fall.
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