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Post by Nidaros on Jan 30, 2018 14:41:48 GMT -5
^Wheresthedefense: You have been busy...why no mean?
Check the station called Ålesund IV (Nørve) to get data from Ålesund city. Vigra is an island off Ålesund where the airport is.
Some facts about those places...in Dec 2000, Tafjord recorded a 24-hr mean of 15C. In December!
Nyrud is located in a place called Pasvik valley, which has recorded the warmest monthly 24-hr mean ever in far northern Finnmark: 19.5C. Almost 70 N. Skibotn recorded 32.7C in Jul 2014. Skibotn is the driest place with a shoreline in Norway (excl Svalbard). Earlier weather stations annual mean 300 mm precip.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 30, 2018 15:46:30 GMT -5
i did a box for norway too. this station is located in finnmark and it managed 8 months with a mean below 0C. very impressive.
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Post by Nidaros on Jan 30, 2018 16:38:04 GMT -5
i did a box for norway too. this station is located in finnmark and it managed 8 months with a mean below 0C. very impressive. And it is only 381 m ASL on the Finnmark Plateau
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Post by Nidaros on Jan 30, 2018 16:41:23 GMT -5
I don’t like to include mean since I find it makes the weather box too cluttered and it can be found by averaging the max and min. Alesund IV had some missing data so I used the other station. It was about 1-1.5 C warmer in all months. Nice stats! The Tafjord one is the most impressive IMO. I think there are different practice wrt mean here and over there. Sorry for mixing up the names.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 30, 2018 20:57:21 GMT -5
Buxton 2017 with added snow falling days.
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Post by Lommaren on Jan 31, 2018 10:30:58 GMT -5
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Post by Lommaren on Jan 31, 2018 10:44:49 GMT -5
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Post by Lommaren on Jan 31, 2018 10:49:10 GMT -5
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Post by Nidaros on Jan 31, 2018 11:15:55 GMT -5
^Sunny Irkutsk beating Tenerife
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Post by Lommaren on Jan 31, 2018 12:41:32 GMT -5
^Sunny Irkutsk beating Tenerife Highland areas there are always cloudier than the coast, so it won't have beaten Santa Cruz!
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Post by urania93 on Feb 5, 2018 16:55:54 GMT -5
With more than one month of delay, here I am! I'm posting our 2017 averages only now because Italy has a weird politics about weather data availability, many data are not public-access and the other are often managed at a regional level. My region decided to publish the measures of their weather stations only twice a year, and the data for the second half of 2017 were published only 2 days ago. Anyway, I managed to prepare the summaries for some places at different altitude around my place. In extreme summary, the year was mostly characterised by a prolonged dry period between August and November, while usually the Autumn period is one of the rainiest of the year. Let's start from the Torino Caselle airport weather station. This localities is used as a reference also for the city of Turin, for example the climate stats usually displayed by wikipedia are from this place. Actually, I didn't use the data from the official weather station but from another one, which is just 60 m away, because the provided data were more complete (still, the rain data of January and December were too fragmented). Anyway the values are completely comparable. This weather station is in here. The immediate comparison is with a weather station inside the city of Turin, in particular the most complete measures are from a weather station in a park in the historical center of the city, in here. Turin center tends to be systematically warmer than the airport. Then I passed to my valley station. Let's start from a low altitude weather station, which is also the closest to my place. The weather station is in here. Generally speaking the place is cooler than Turin, but the winter temperatures are strongly mitigated by frequent foehn wind episodes and thermal inversion with the plain. Unfortunately this weather station doesn't measure snow. Then I passed to mountain weather station. The first is at an altitude of about 1000 m, on the less sunny side of the valley and in the middle of a large natural park in Salbertrand in here. Even higher, I also made a table for Sestriere, at about 2000 m of altitude. Their weather station is in here. Despite the drier than usual year they still managed to get quite a lot of snow!
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Post by Lommaren on Feb 5, 2018 16:59:57 GMT -5
Impressive work urania93 Turin really had a monster heat wave last summer by the looks of it! The valley must've been some relief, those extra hundreds metres of elevation must mean a whole lot!
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Post by urania93 on Feb 5, 2018 17:05:35 GMT -5
Impressive work urania93 Turin really had a monster heat wave last summer by the looks of it! The valley must've been some relief, those extra hundreds metres of elevation must mean a whole lot! Turin shows quite an evident heat-island effect during the summer, so it wasn't so much warmer than during the previous years. The warmest period in absolute was at the really beginning of August, but if I'm not wrong it didn't break any record in my region (as it did in central Italy instead). In my opinion summer at my altitude is warm enough already (probably because in Turin home with an AC are nearly not-existing), while during the warmest and sunniest days mountain places are the best places in absolute (just beware sunburns!)
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Post by lab276 on Feb 21, 2018 23:35:13 GMT -5
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Post by lab276 on Feb 24, 2018 0:14:51 GMT -5
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Post by lab276 on Feb 24, 2018 1:10:58 GMT -5
Lord Howe Island, to compare it with the Canary Islands, Azores and Madeira
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Post by Babu on Feb 24, 2018 3:08:28 GMT -5
How come you casually have whold summers deviating 2'C positively? We have never got such an anomaly in Umeå
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Post by lab276 on Feb 24, 2018 3:47:01 GMT -5
How come you casually have whold summers deviating 2'C positively? We have never got such an anomaly in Umeå Which location are you looking at?
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Post by Babu on Feb 24, 2018 3:51:26 GMT -5
How come you casually have whold summers deviating 2'C positively? We have never got such an anomaly in Umeå Which location are you looking at? That island
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Post by lab276 on Feb 24, 2018 4:00:12 GMT -5
I have no idea. Some places are just more prone to getting sustained positive anomalies I suppose. The Tasman Sea itself had sustained +2C SST anomalies, or something like that, for a long time, that would've had some effect.
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