I have been fascinated with charts and graphs ever since beginning to study math in grade school. I was asking questions such as why in nature are there spikes on charts with, more often than not, subsequent downturns in association with statistical graphs? Take this chart depicting December arctic sea ice from the National Snow […]
Month: January 2017
Post 2. El Nino’s Ramping Up The Heat
Using National Center for Environmental Information data, the last two years (from DEC 2014 through NOV 2016) have been the hottest in the lower 48 states since 1895: https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/temp-and-precip/climatological-rankings/index.php?periods%5B%5D=1&periods%5B%5D=24¶meter=tavg&state=110&div=0&month=11&year=2016 It is no wonder that we observed 24 months in a row of more daily record highs than lows as shown in our last post over […]
Three Consecutive Globally Warm Record Years……. Just a Note
I am letting all know that this blog site is up and running on the day that NOAA and NASA announced that the planet has had three consecutive years of record average warmth. The following are a couple of links to other respectable sites marking this dubious landmark moment in climate science history and the planet: Mashable.com […]
Post 1. U.S. Record Temperature Trends (Counting Those Records)
Welcome to my first blog on my new web site Guy on Climate. You will find that I am very much into scientific statistics that have been showing a warming trend on our planet for decades. We will explore together some relatable, simple math on a variety of climate subjects. There are a multitude of […]