|
Post by Lommaren on Mar 29, 2018 9:28:06 GMT -5
So, make sure that the colder temp is either on the same latitude or closer to the equator than the warmer one was! Rule two; please no mountain top climates since those obviously are heavily skewed So, what about this one: 8 March 2015:Norrköping: 16.6/6.8 Inukjuak: -27.5/-35.6 So, Norrköping was 44.1°C warmer during the day and 42.4°C warmer during the night. Both locations are coastal. Epic. This is the granddaddy though: 10 January 2002:
Røst: 8.0/7.0 Verkhoyansk: -47.1/-52.1 55.1°C warmer as daytime high in Røst and a whooping 59.1°C warmer 24-hour low
|
|
|
Post by Babu on Mar 29, 2018 10:00:31 GMT -5
*insert a Scandinavian climate and a Siberian or NE Canadian climate*
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Mar 29, 2018 10:12:32 GMT -5
Sure, but there can still be really good ones at lower latitudes too, although not as extreme obviously given the strength of the sunlight.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Mar 29, 2018 10:24:02 GMT -5
26 December 2015
London 15.2c / 13.3c
Winnipeg -16.2c / -21.8c
|
|
|
Post by Babu on Mar 29, 2018 11:10:23 GMT -5
Insert norwegian 18'C föhn winds vs siberian -50'C average lows
|
|
|
Post by Ariete on Mar 29, 2018 11:12:12 GMT -5
jajajajaja bros:
|
|
|
Post by boombo on Mar 29, 2018 11:23:24 GMT -5
Aboyne, Scotland's average TMax in March 2012 (14.2C) vs. anywhere else on the 57th parallel in any March ever. www.tutiempo.net/clima/03-2012/ws-30800.htmlAs a side note, Aboyne had four consecutive days above 20C in that March, which it only beat once the whole rest of the year and that was in May, so it managed more sustained warmth in March than in any of the summer months!
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Mar 29, 2018 11:43:14 GMT -5
Stockholm maded Dublin and Joensuu maded Córdoba bro
|
|
|
Post by Crunch41 on Mar 29, 2018 22:49:23 GMT -5
Both places here are in the same county: Humboldt County, CA. California gets some huge changes in climate over short distances and this is an example. Willow Creek, CA is 40.9N and at 610'/186m Eureka, CA is at 40.8N and sea level. They are 1 hour away by car, but Eureka averages 63.4/52.0 in July and Willow Creek averages 94.5/52.0 (17.4/11.1 and 34.7/11.1). If Willow Creek gets a heatwave, there can be a 40-degree difference between the two. July 2015 had some hot days for both places: July 1st: Willow Creek 109/61 versus 62/54 (42.8/16.1 vs 16.7/12.2) July 28th: Willow Creek 101/53 versus 77/51 (38.3/11.7 vs 25.0/10.6) **77F/25C is a new monthly record high for Eureka. July 29th: Willow Creek 109/56 versus 75/54 (42.8/13.3 vs 23.9/12.2) July 30th: Willow Creek 109/58 versus 67/53 (42.8/14.4 vs 19.4/ Willow creek had an all-time max of 119F on July 16, 1972. The low was 59F. (48.3/15.0C) And Eureka? 62/51F (16.7/10.6C) Max temp was 57F/31.7C higher, min temp was 8F/4.4C higher.In 1987 Willow creek hit 114 and a monthly record of 34 in the same month. I'll post that in the monthly thread later. They also had a high of just 62 that month (45.6C max, 16.7C max, and 1.1C low) Temperatures from NOWData, Willow Creek 1 NW versus Eureka WFO Woodley Island en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willow_Creek,_California#Climate en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eureka,_California#Climate
|
|
|
Post by Cadeau on Mar 30, 2018 1:14:27 GMT -5
24 January 2016
Icheon (37°16′N) -8.1 / -18.1°C
Sevilla (37°23′N) 20.5 / 9.7°C
|
|
|
Post by Babu on Mar 30, 2018 2:55:58 GMT -5
On January 28th 1998, Oymakyon had a -44.0/-54.8'C day while Sunndalsöra at the roughly the same latitude recorded 17.9'C
Considering they're on opposite sides of the earth it is quite possible Oymakyon recorded its low around the same time as Tafjord's high, assuming the high was set during the day.
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Mar 30, 2018 7:01:30 GMT -5
On January 28th 1998, Oymakyon had a -44.0/-54.8'C day while Sunndalsöra at the roughly the same latitude recorded 17.9'C Considering they're on opposite sides of the earth it is quite possible Oymakyon recorded its low around the same time as Tafjord's high, assuming the high was set during the day. Sunndalsøra is better to compare with Yakutsk since they're both on 62°N and Yakutsk is actually slightly closer to the equator but I see your point. Anyway, that day Yakutsk had -35.9/-38.7 which is not as impressive, but still a rather flashy high difference of 53.8°C at the end of the day
|
|
|
Post by aabc123 on Mar 30, 2018 11:56:33 GMT -5
My nearest station (57,85°N, 84 m) and Cjul'Bju (57,77°N, 266 m) in south-east Yakutia. The locations in Yakutia are pretty high, thus that 266 m is bottom of a valley.
8 January 2014
Võru 7.2°C/5.8°C Cjul'Bju -42.4°C /-47.9°C
Võru was warmer 49.6°C during the day and warmer 53.7°C during the night.
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Mar 31, 2018 7:03:11 GMT -5
My nearest station (57,85°N, 84 m) and Cjul'Bju (57,77°N, 266 m) in south-east Yakutia. The locations in Yakutia are pretty high, thus that 266 m is bottom of a valley. 8 January 2014 Võru 7.2°C/5.8°C Cjul'Bju -42.4°C /-47.9°C Võru was warmer 49.6°C during the day and warmer 53.7°C during the night. The latitudes 50-57 are actually quite interesting. A lot of very cold places in Siberia and Canada within that latitude range and a stronger possibility of winter warmth in Europe there.
|
|
|
Post by lab276 on Apr 6, 2018 4:21:34 GMT -5
A date picked somewhat at random, January 12 2007
Sydney-by-the-sea 26.6C The arse end 40.9C
I'm not sure if this is really what the thread is looking for, as this is a local phenomenon, but they are at the same latitude so whatever.
|
|