Showing posts with label climate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label climate. Show all posts

July 21 – Lowest Recorded Temperature Day

Posted on July 21, 2018


So, if I were to tell you that, on this date in 1983, people recorded the lowest temp ever measured on the ground...

Where would you think that temperature was recorded?

You probably realize that most of us are having summer, not winter, in July - because we live in the Northern Hemisphere. So you probably realize that you should guess a place that experiences winter in July - somewhere in the Southern Hemisphere. And you might have then guessed that it was in the middle of Antarctica.

If that is what you guessed, you're right!

A frigid - 89.2 C (-128.6 F) was measured on that cold, cold July day in the Soviet Vostok Station. 

Above, Vostok Station from the air...
Below, Vostok Station's location
from space!


But...I thought the world was getting warmer...?

Sometimes people wonder how we can have record-breaking cold spells if the planet is heating up. Even if they aren't science deniers, and they accept that global warming really is happening (and that it's the result of human activity), they still wonder about super cold spells and gigantic blizzards.

First, this world record is actually pretty old - 35 years old, to be exact.

The first Antarctic stations
were built on islands and
coastlines.
Second, we must remember that getting a temperature reading far into the Antarctic continent almost surely couldn't happen until the 1950s at the earliest, because that's when people began to build scientific stations in the interior of the continent. We may have missed SO many lower temperatures before that time!

Third, global warming is also called "climate change" - and climate is the pattern of weather over long periods of time. So short events like a powerful 2-week storm or a 1-day cold snap get lots of attention from us, but doesn't much impact the average temperatures that, we have seen, are clearly going up.



Fourth, actually, warmer weather means more ocean evaporation. And more ocean evaporation means more clouds, more rain, more snow. Also, higher temperatures means more air heating up and rising, which of course causes areas of low pressure and creates wind as air rushes in from elsewhere. 

What do you get when you have more moisture in the air, more low pressure areas, more wind and rain and snow? 

The answer is: more storms, and more intense storms. 


It's more complicated than that, of course, but global warming / climate change can actually produce more extreme weather in all directions - drier here, wetter there, colder now, hotter then.



April 20 – International Cli-Fi Day

Posted on April 20, 2017

I have never even heard of cli-fi before - have you?
And yet, I've read some!

Cli-fi is climate change fiction. It's a small slice out of the science-fiction or speculative-fiction genre. Even before we knew that our planet is slowly warming up due to human activities that release carbon emissions (burning gasoline and other fossil fuels, especially) - even before that, some authors explored global climate change in their novels. A good example is Jules Verne, who way back in 1889 wrote The Purchase of the North Pole.

Hopefully not all of cli-fi is dystopian.
I like to get a bit of hope in my fiction -
don't you?
The cli-fi book I've read, Blind Waves by Steven Gould, is more for adults than YA. But here is an article with some cli-fi for kids.

Check out authors such as Sarah Holding, David Thorpe, Saci Lloyd, and George Marshall.






Also on this date:












(Third Thursday of April)


















Plan ahead:

Check out my Pinterest boards for:
And here are my Pinterest boards for:


February 18 – National Hate Florida Day

Posted on February 18, 2016

When it comes to hatred, I'm against it!

But this silly “holiday” isn't really about hatred. People who are suffering in bitterly cold weather right about now might love Florida, might long to live in Florida (or at least spend a week there, to thaw out), might even envy Florida with a bitterness equal to their own bitter weather in, say, Minnesota or Montana...

And why is this? Because Florida is the warmest state in the U.S.!

Of course, we are talking about state-wide average temperatures. Florida and many other southern states have made the top-10 list of warmest states. And did you already guess that Hawaii is on the list, as well?

But the tropical islands of Hawaii are not #1 on the list! Instead, the warmest state, talking average temperatures over the course of the entire year, is Florida!

So then you get weather maps that look like this:



And all the people “enjoying” high temperatures of 1 degree...or maybe even minus 16 degrees!...have to see warm, cozy Florida down there at the bottom of their weather map screens...day in and day out!

What winter?

As I sit writing this post, here in Southern California—deep into February, still very much in winter—I thought about the fact that today we enjoyed a high of 90 degrees, and even now at 8:00 p.m., it is 73 degrees. Warm days and super nice evenings—and it's been this way all week. So I got to wondering where California is on the top-10 list of warmest states.

And I discovered that California didn't make the top 10!

Well, no duh! California is a really large state. And we have high snowy mountains and a desert that is THE HOTTEST place in the U.S., in the summer, and we have foggy Northern California coasts as well as sunny So Cal...So naturally the average temperatures are not going to be as high as a smaller state like Hawaii.

It turns out that California is #8 warmest U.S. state in the winter, but not in the top-10 in either the summer or in the year-round list. And that's one reason that I love Southern California!

Here's the complete list of the warmest states:


Rank
Year
Winter
Summer
1
Florida
Hawaii
Louisiana
2
Hawaii
Florida
Texas
3
Louisiana
Louisiana
Florida
4
Texas
Texas
Oklahoma
5
Georgia
Georgia
Mississippi
6
Mississippi
Mississippi
Arkansas
7
Alabama
Alabama
Georgia
8
South Carolina
California
Alabama
9
Arkansas
South Carolina
South Carolina
10
Arizona
Arizona
Arizona


And this is what Southern California often looks like, even in the winter:




Also on this date:





























Stained-glass artist Louis Comfort Tiffany's birthday






Anniversary of the invention of the modern vacuum






Plan ahead:

Check out my Pinterest boards for:
And here are my Pinterest boards for: