![]() ![]() You can even click on the map of the USA in California and get a list that sure looks to me like it matches: I checked the “raw after combining GHCN and USHCN” for, for example, the State Capitol: Sacramento. Where I’ve entered some places that ought to have records. Give it a day or two…)Īnd I have done a bit of “spot checking”. (Though I think I can fix GIStemp by merging in the USHCN.v2 data. The temperature series are too broken by thermometer deletions. GIStemp and ANY THING ELSE USING GHCN DATA produce no useful results after 2006. UPDATE: I now have a completely independent confirmation (see comments below). It ought to be verified that the present conditions still hold in the present published data.) I doubt they have changed the data much since then (though it is possible. My copy was downloaded some time ago (the 2009 data “cuts off” in June so that is about when I got my copy). I have been rooting around in the GHCN data set that feeds into GIStemp. ![]() I got beans… So I called a big load of BS but could not point to any reason why. Normally in mid summer they have lots of wonderful red flowers that attract lots of hummingbirds, but they can not set seed over about 93-95 F and in July and August I expect only decoration. Further, my Runner Beans were setting seeds. I had 2 of the special varieties that were setting some fruit, but far less than in prior years. My tomatoes were not setting fruit (they can not set fruit below a 50F night temperature unless you use special varieties. No way was this year even a regularly warm year. Lately we’ve been told that California and the west in general had set a 115 year record for high temperatures. For now, The Great Dying, in America: Who Needs Snowy Mountains When You Can Use The BeachĪre 4 near-ocean locations enough to measure California? Would they be warmer than the snowy mountains? If a future posting, we will look to see if a similar thing happens in Europe. In this posting we look at the impact of The Great Dying of Thermometers in America, with a specific focus on California. That blue line on the top is the Northern Temperate zone, from 30N to 50N. ![]()
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