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uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) (uk.sci.weather) For the discussion of daily weather events, chiefly affecting the UK and adjacent parts of Europe, both past and predicted. The discussion is open to all, but contributions on a practical scientific level are encouraged. |
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#1
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Someone wrote the following:
It is very nice here. Should go into the 70's today and be warm all week. Lovely Indian Summer. to which someone else replied: 70 degree weather in Ohio in November is not a lovely Indian Summer. That is called freakish global warming... to which someone else replied: global warming doesn't mean that everything gets warmer, sure it does in general, but specific temperatures still depend on local weather patterns. remember it's only what 1/50 of a degree per year or so. so yes 70 degrees in ohio in november is def indian summer NOT global warming. I think the hot temperatures of late are a combination of three things. First, there is global warming of a few degrees. Second, we are nearing solar maximum, when the solar heating is slightly higher. The third thing is pseudo-random chaos (i.e., weather). Due to these combined effects, we are setting record highs all over the place and finally seeing the effects of global warming. -- Jason Taylor | "Doctor, don't cut so deep! That's the third Hyattsville, MD| operating table you've ruined this week!" |
#2
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Ref. the solar maximum comment - despite the high solar activity of the past
2-3 weeks, solar maximum was reached in 2000 and we are now part-way down the slope towards minimum. In fact, the solar indices indicate that solar activity during our summer was in fact on average lower than at any time since 1998. The current activity and solar flares will almost certainly prove to be a blip. The weather is unrelated to the sun-spot cycle - the hot summer of 1976 occured during solar minimum. my £0.02 Jim. "Jason Taylor" wrote in message om... Someone wrote the following: It is very nice here. Should go into the 70's today and be warm all week. Lovely Indian Summer. to which someone else replied: 70 degree weather in Ohio in November is not a lovely Indian Summer. That is called freakish global warming... to which someone else replied: global warming doesn't mean that everything gets warmer, sure it does in general, but specific temperatures still depend on local weather patterns. remember it's only what 1/50 of a degree per year or so. so yes 70 degrees in ohio in november is def indian summer NOT global warming. I think the hot temperatures of late are a combination of three things. First, there is global warming of a few degrees. Second, we are nearing solar maximum, when the solar heating is slightly higher. The third thing is pseudo-random chaos (i.e., weather). Due to these combined effects, we are setting record highs all over the place and finally seeing the effects of global warming. -- Jason Taylor | "Doctor, don't cut so deep! That's the third Hyattsville, MD| operating table you've ruined this week!" |
#3
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sorry for the typo - 1998 should read 1999
"Jim Smith" wrote in message ... Ref. the solar maximum comment - despite the high solar activity of the past 2-3 weeks, solar maximum was reached in 2000 and we are now part-way down the slope towards minimum. In fact, the solar indices indicate that solar activity during our summer was in fact on average lower than at any time since 1998. The current activity and solar flares will almost certainly prove to be a blip. The weather is unrelated to the sun-spot cycle - the hot summer of 1976 occured during solar minimum. my £0.02 Jim. "Jason Taylor" wrote in message om... Someone wrote the following: It is very nice here. Should go into the 70's today and be warm all week. Lovely Indian Summer. to which someone else replied: 70 degree weather in Ohio in November is not a lovely Indian Summer. That is called freakish global warming... to which someone else replied: global warming doesn't mean that everything gets warmer, sure it does in general, but specific temperatures still depend on local weather patterns. remember it's only what 1/50 of a degree per year or so. so yes 70 degrees in ohio in november is def indian summer NOT global warming. I think the hot temperatures of late are a combination of three things. First, there is global warming of a few degrees. Second, we are nearing solar maximum, when the solar heating is slightly higher. The third thing is pseudo-random chaos (i.e., weather). Due to these combined effects, we are setting record highs all over the place and finally seeing the effects of global warming. -- Jason Taylor | "Doctor, don't cut so deep! That's the third Hyattsville, MD| operating table you've ruined this week!" |
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