|
Post by Ethereal on Jan 25, 2024 7:41:53 GMT -5
I could swear that Rome's sunshine hours were always around 2,500 (until somebody changed them). Or maybe it's a personal Mandela effect... That was 1971-2000 data, this one is 1991-2020 A huge leap. Maybe they've used a different site for the recent years data?
|
|
|
Post by tompas on Jan 25, 2024 7:59:44 GMT -5
That was 1971-2000 data, this one is 1991-2020 A huge leap. Maybe they've used a different site for the recent years data? Don't know, but they shouldn't be getting drastically different results if they did. Rome's 1971-2000 sun was 2473, which is less than our coast gets for the most part, and that doesn't make sense to me. Also, the 1971-2000 sun for Naples is 2375, I don't buy that either.
|
|
|
Post by cawfeefan on Jan 25, 2024 8:25:27 GMT -5
A huge leap. Maybe they've used a different site for the recent years data? Don't know, but they shouldn't be getting drastically different results if they did. Rome's 1971-2000 sun was 2473, which is less than our coast gets for the most part, and that doesn't make sense to me. Also, the 1971-2000 sun for Naples is 2375, I don't buy that either.
I remember someone saying on CD once that Rome has 4% more sunshine than Melbourne, which correlates with the 1971-2000 figure you state. But yeah, the difference with the new normals seems too big.
|
|