|
Post by Lommaren on Oct 26, 2017 16:31:05 GMT -5
Salem, Oregon, in 2006: not that impressive during the North American heat wave that summer, save for the whooping record highs! Extremes in rainfall too...
|
|
|
Post by boombo on Oct 27, 2017 3:21:49 GMT -5
Where do you get all these from, how do you know which years in which places were interesting without looking them all up?
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Oct 27, 2017 3:26:27 GMT -5
Where do you get all these from, how do you know which years in which places were interesting without looking them all up? Knowing about years when records were set, knowing about which years saw heat and cold waves at a continental scale and all that It's not actually that complicated!
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Oct 27, 2017 4:01:35 GMT -5
Case study boombo : * Find the month with the most rain days ever in Vigo - the rain capital of Southern Europe - on AEMET's extreme values charts. * Look that year up. * Find other interesting things from that year: now what about this March vs November contrast - completely unthinkable in Northern Europe where March is high-pressure cental Also, first annual frost at 264 metres elevation 42N at Vigo Airport on 16 December 2001... what the hell March got its first dry day on the 31st - so damn close to a full-wet month!
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Oct 27, 2017 12:41:45 GMT -5
Falun in 1985. What an abomination and a waste of a year for an otherwise relatively mild inland place
|
|
|
Post by Babu on Oct 27, 2017 13:15:53 GMT -5
Falun in 1985. What an abomination and a waste of a year for an otherwise relatively mild inland place Hmm, I thought it was 87 that was the shit year?
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Oct 27, 2017 13:17:26 GMT -5
1985 was even worse than 1987 up north and inland. Coastal southern and continental Europe, 1987 was the worst Just ask Kronan about Kuusamo in 1985 lol
|
|
|
Post by Babu on Oct 27, 2017 13:28:04 GMT -5
1985 was even worse than 1987 up north and inland. Coastal southern and continental Europe, 1987 was the worst Just ask Kronan about Kuusamo in 1985 lol You should learn to use Excel. Imagine your übermenschen robotic tenacity delbing through öppna data. Perhaps then you'd be able to make a 2014 weatherbox for Umeå University station
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Oct 27, 2017 13:34:10 GMT -5
You should learn to use Excel. Imagine your übermenschen robotic tenacity delbing through öppna data. Perhaps then you'd be able to make a 2014 weatherbox for Umeå University station Thanks for the compliment fellow Aryan
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Oct 28, 2017 6:21:46 GMT -5
This is the most absurd year of all absurd Eureka years! The place had its warmer sum... sorry January night at a 17.2C low on 18 January So, Eureka's warmest ever night was set pretty much the exact date where most NH locations have their coldest night on average in any given year! Then you have this irregular temperature pattern as well throughout the year, coupled with an abnormally cool summer and abnormally warm winters! Due to this, Eureka didn't even receive any light frosts, which considering its proximity to the Humboldt Hills, is highly unusual. boombo hehe what you think?
|
|
|
Post by boombo on Oct 28, 2017 6:42:01 GMT -5
Absurd is the word! That is probably the weirdest year's weather I have ever seen, most people's fantasy climates look more plausible than this.
Even if you ignore that one-off freak January night which is special enough in its own right, how in the world can a July at 40N not produce a higher average Tmax than in January, especially looking at those rain totals and assuming July must have been a lot sunnier (shame they don't have sun totals to look at btw)?
I don't care how cold that ocean current is, that kind of year just shouldn't be possible!
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Oct 28, 2017 7:28:31 GMT -5
Absurd is the word! That is probably the weirdest year's weather I have ever seen, most people's fantasy climates look more plausible than this. Even if you ignore that one-off freak January night which is special enough in its own right, how in the world can a July at 40N not produce a higher average Tmax than in January, especially looking at those rain totals and assuming July must have been a lot sunnier (shame they don't have sun totals to look at btw)? I don't care how cold that ocean current is, that kind of year just shouldn't be possible! Haha yes. It's completely bonkers all of it. During the summer the fog there is just as intense as around Golden Gate during mornings which prevents anything resembling heat to be formed there until mid-August. Summer afternoons are still quite sunny though. Unfortunately Météo Climat doesn't include sun totals at all
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Oct 28, 2017 16:53:42 GMT -5
Tromsö in 1985: it's polar continental monster climate during the year when the interior was cold as hell! Sensational to have that as its peak ever cold for its latitude and all that
|
|
|
Post by Hiromant on Oct 28, 2017 16:57:39 GMT -5
I always wish the C/F conversion was a clickable button that changes temperature values in the table. Listing them on top of each other creates a hard to read mess.
|
|
|
Post by Nidaros on Oct 28, 2017 17:18:13 GMT -5
Tromsö in 1985: it's polar continental monster climate during the year when the interior was cold as hell! Sensational to have that as its peak ever cold for its latitude and all that Yeah, doesn't get very cold there. If that is the met office 100 m asl, the all-time low is just under -18.C. Looking at that year, Feb (coldest), Apr, May and Dec was significantly colder than avg, while Jul was warmer, Aug also a little warmer.
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Oct 28, 2017 17:22:07 GMT -5
Yeah, doesn't get very cold there. If that is the met office 100 m asl, the all-time low is just under -18.C. Looking at that year, Feb (coldest), Apr, May and Dec was significantly colder than avg, while Jul was warmer, Aug also a little warmer. Do you think an airport station ever would fall below -16C there? Or will the cold be more compressed similar to Yakutsk? I'd be interested to see an airport station and whether it could close in on Dfc though!
|
|
|
Post by boombo on Oct 28, 2017 17:27:39 GMT -5
Where could I find daily snow depth data for Tromso for 1996/97, the year they had 240 cm at the end of April or whatever it was?
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Oct 28, 2017 17:29:20 GMT -5
Where could I find daily snow depth data for Tromso for 1996/97, the year they had 240 cm at the end of April or whatever it was? Precipitation data is at Météo Climat if you wish Then divide probability and all that lol.
|
|
|
Post by Nidaros on Oct 28, 2017 17:40:54 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by Nidaros on Oct 28, 2017 17:46:11 GMT -5
Where could I find daily snow depth data for Tromso for 1996/97, the year they had 240 cm at the end of April or whatever it was? As far as I know that is only available in the database (eklima).
|
|