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Tom_Turner
2008-03-15, 03:37 PM
http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories200 ... olest.html (http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2008/20080313_coolest.html)

U.S. Winter Temperature Highlights

2007 Statewide temperature chart.

The average temperature across both the contiguous U.S. and the globe during climatological winter (December 2007-February 2008) was the coolest since 2001, according to scientists at NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C

+ High Resolution (Credit: NOAA)

* In the contiguous United States, the average winter temperature was 33.2°F (0.6°C), which was 0.2°F (0.1°C) above the 20th century average – yet still ranks as the coolest since 2001. It was the 54th coolest winter since national records began in 1895.

* Winter temperatures were warmer than average from Texas to the Southeast and along the Eastern Seaboard, while cooler-than-average temperatures stretched from much of the upper Midwest to the West Coast.

* With higher-than-average temperatures in the Northeast and South, the contiguous U.S. winter temperature-related energy demand was approximately 1.7 percent lower than average, based on NOAA’s Residential Energy Demand Temperature Index.

nwafan20
2008-03-15, 04:04 PM
Yeah, so much for global warming eh?

Here where I am, we were 4 inches from record snowfall.... ever...

Lezam
2008-03-16, 10:06 AM
Didnt feel that way, we hardly got any snow!

Matt Molnar
2008-03-16, 03:18 PM
While the Midwest got clobbered and even points up north just a few hundred miles away got buried all winter, here in NYC we got about 8 inches of snow total, and 6 of those inches were from one storm. Just two years ago we experienced the heaviest snowfall in history, 26.9in in Central Park. I think the coldest it got was the low teens a couple of days in January...normally we have at least one week, usually more, of real cold single-digits and low teens...while in February we had many days in the upper 40s and one day in the upper 60s where I went out in shorts. I think these extreme events, along with others that have happened here and the snow in the Midwest this year, are pretty good evidence that the climate is changing. I just don't think that it's caused by us.

moose135
2008-03-16, 07:47 PM
I think these extreme events, along with others that have happened here and the snow in the Midwest this year, are pretty good evidence that the climate is changing. I just don't think that it's caused by us.
http://www.seanbonner.com/blog/archives/001857.php

" You may be interested to know that global warming, earthquakes, hurricanes, and other natural disasters are a direct effect of the shrinking numbers of Pirates since the 1800s. For your interest, I have included a graph of the approximate number of pirates versus the average global temperature over the last 200 years. As you can see, there is a statistically significant inverse relationship between pirates and global temperature."

http://moose135.smugmug.com/photos/266588971_ifewh-L.jpg

Matt Molnar
2008-03-16, 08:04 PM
Of course the RIAA would probably blame MORE pirates for global warming.

nwafan20
2008-03-17, 07:43 PM
AARRGGHHH Ye Matey!!!