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jpg |
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2002-02-21-record-warmth
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2 |
011211 |
htm O |
StarTrib |
M P L S44 Days Temps Above Ave
- "Without snow cover, it's pretty hard to keep those temperatures
down,"
- The previous record stretch of above-normal temperatures was 42 days,
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3 |
011223 |
htm |
StarTrib |
Record56days Above Ave
- Minnesota's stretch
of above-average daily temperatures is expected to end at 56
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4 |
020109 |
htm O |
StarTrib |
Temp Record45-49-
- Record warm day, 49, in Twin Cities; 50s elsewhere in
Minnesota
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5 |
020219 |
htm |
StarTrib |
Early Spring Twin Cities
- The Twin Cities' unusually warm weather is tricking tulips, crab
apples, maples and other plants into thinking that the April-like weather
actually is spring
- "It's not just early. It's outrageously early,"
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6 |
020221 |
htm |
USAToday |
Winter Record4 Degrees Up
- The nationally averaged temperature was 39.94 degrees Fahrenheit
for November through January, 4.3 degrees above the 1895-2001 long-term
average
- The previous record for the same three-month period 39.63
degrees Fahrenheit was in 1999-2000. Since 1976, the nationally averaged
November-January temperature has risen at a rate of 1.2 degrees Fahrenheit
per decade, the data center reported Thursday
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7 |
020813 |
htm |
NYT |
Heat Waves Deadly
- Most Deadly of the Natural Disasters: The Heat Wave
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8 |
040720 |
htm O |
USAtoday |
Nome Heat Record
- It was the second wettest June on record for Mississippi and No.
3 for Louisiana,
- Alaska had record warmth, with a statewide temperature 5.2 degrees
above normal
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9 |
050528 |
htm O |
USAtoday |
Seattles First Ever Heat Alert
- Friday's high of
89 degrees at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport broke a 33-year-old record
for the date. Thursday's high also 89 degrees broke a 58-year-old
record.
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10 |
060802 |
htm O |
USAToday |
Summer nights heating up, scientists say
- During heat waves, like the one that now has a grip on much of the
East, one of the major causes of heat deaths is the lack of night cooling
that would normally allow a stressed body to recover, scientists say.
- A top federal research meteorologist said he "almost fell out of
my chair" when he looked over U.S. night minimum temperature records over
the past 96 years and saw the skyrocketing trend of hot summer nights.
- While the highest-ever figure was in
the middle of America's brutal Dust Bowl, when 41% of the nation had much
above normal summer-night temperatures
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11 |
070315 |
htm O |
USAtoday |
2006-7 Winter Warmest On Record
- the combined
land and ocean temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere for December through
February were 1.3°F above average for the period since record keeping
began in 1880.
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12 |
070315 |
htm O |
USAToday |
Winter2006-2007 Warmest Ever
- combined
land and ocean temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere for December through
February were 1.3°F above average for the period since record keeping
began in 1880.
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13 |
070402 |
htm O |
WashPost |
Russia Sees Ill Effects of 'General Winter's' Retreat
- Experts have long feared that Earth's warming climate would cause
tropical diseases such as malaria to spread into more temperate zones, but
a dramatic example of an apparently climate-related disease outbreak cropped
up this winter in a cold place -- Russia.
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14 |
070513 |
htm O |
USAToday |
Eastern U S10degrees Hotter
- Future eastern USA summers look much hotter
than originally predicted with daily highs about 10 degrees warmer than in
recent years by the mid-2080s,
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15 |
070626 |
htm O |
USAToday |
Dozens Dead European Heat Wave
- Power blackouts hit more than a dozen parts of
Athens on Wednesday and 95 fires were reported around Greece as a deadly
heat wave plaguing southeast Europe simmered on.
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16 |
070712 |
htm O |
WashPost |
Report Warns of a Much Warmer Northeast - washingtonpost.com
- Winters would
be on average 8 to 12 degrees higher by the end of the century, and summers
6 to 14 degrees higher. [RSB only for a few years or months before
getting hotter faster!!!!]
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17 |
070718 |
htm O |
USAToday |
Killer Heat Bakes Europe
- A heat wave sweeping central and southeastern Europe
has killed at least 13 people this week, with soaring temperatures causing
forest fires and damaging crops
- The extreme heat and lack of rain is also causing concern among farmers
in the area.
- Residents across the south of England reported flooded neighborhoods
and London's Underground closed subway lines and stations across the city
because of excess water.
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070816 |
htm O |
USAToday |
Swelters In Record Heat Japan
- The mercury hit 105.6 degrees Fahrenheit in the western city of Tajimi
and also the central city of Kumagaya on Thursday afternoon, breaking a previous
national record of set in 1933
- rail tracks were bent out of shape in the sun
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19 |
071002 |
htm O |
USAToday |
Heat Robs U Sof Prime Fall Colors
- "We're slightly behind because of the warm temperatures at
night,"
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20 |
071008 |
htm O |
WashPost |
Record Heat Halts Chicago Marathon
- 88-degree heat and smothering humidity forced organizers to shut
down the course midway through the race
- The temperature was a record for the Chicago Marathon, topping the
previous mark of 84 degrees in 1979
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21 |
080115 |
htm O |
USAToday |
2007 Warmest On Record
- 2007 was another sizzling year for the planet the warmest
year ever recorded for the Earth's land areas, federal scientists at NOAA's
National Climatic Data Center reported Tuesday, with an average temperature
about 1.84 degrees above the long-term average
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22 |
080124 |
htm O |
USAToday |
Spring Like Warmth After Records
- Record lows to give way to near spring-like warmth
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23 |
080319 |
htm O |
USAToday |
Spring Keeps Coming Earlier For Birds Bees Trees
- Pollen is bursting. Critters are stirring. Buds are swelling. Biologists
are worrying.
- Satellites measuring when land turns green found that spring "green-up"
is arriving eight hours earlier every year on average since 1982 north of
the Mason-Dixon line
- Biological timing is called phenology
- warmer temperatures and increased carbon dioxide cause earlier,
longer and stronger allergy seasons.
- Phenology data go back to the 14th century for harvest of wine grapes
in France.
- taken May 30, 1868, shows bare limbs.
But the same scene photographed May 30, 2005, by Boston University biology
professor Richard Primack shows them in full spring greenery.
- Even western wildfires have a timing connection to global warming
and are coming earlier.
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24 |
090428 |
htm O |
USAToday |
East Record Heat Fire Threat
- Widespread high temperatures will top
out at 10 to 25 degrees above average
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25 |
100715 |
htm O |
USAToday |
World sizzles to record
- The world is hotter than ever.
- March, April, May and June set records, making
- 2010 the warmest year worldwide since record-
- keeping began in 1880
- There were exceptions: June was cooler than
- average across Scandinavia, southeastern China,
- and the northwestern USA
- Flooding rains like those in Nashville in May will
- be more common.
- "The atmosphere is able to hold more water as it
- warms, and greater water content leads to greater
- downpours," he says.
- He says NASA satellite data shows the average
- temperature in June was 0.43 degrees higher than
- normal. NOAA says it was 1.22 degrees higher.
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