Friday, April 20, 2012

15,000 heat records tied or broken in the U.S.


EarthSky // Blogs // Earth By Matt Daniel Apr 10, 2012



In March 2012, 15,000 warm temperature records broken in US


Some parts of the United States saw temperatures 20 to 40 degrees above average in March 2012.

March 2012 temperature statewide ranks. Image Credit: NCDC/NOAA
On April 9, 2012, NOAA officially classified March 2012 as the warmest March ever recorded in the United States since record keeping began in 1895. Over 15,000 U.S. warm temperature records were broken during this time (7,755 daytime records, 7,517 nighttime records). Many areas saw temperatures some 20 to 40 degrees above average. Every state in the United States, including Alaska, experienced record high temperatures during the month of March 2012. The last time the United States experienced such warm temperatures in the month of March was back in 1910. However, the warmth of 2012 was nearly 0.5 degrees warmer than 1910.
Take a look at a time lapse of the record breaking temperatures that occurred across the United States throughout March 2012:
7,755 record high temperatures were tied or broken during March 2012 in every state. This includes Hawaii and Alaska! Image Credit: NCDC
Here’s the amazing fact regarding the record warmth: According to the National Climatic Data Center, the average temperature for the contiguous United States was 8.6 degrees above the 20th century average. Since record keeping began 117 years ago, only one month, January 2006, seen a larger departure from its average temperature than March 2012. Exactly 15,272 warm temperature records were broken.
7,517 daily highest minimum (nighttime) temperatures were either tied or broken across the United States in March 2012. Yes, this includes Hawaii and Alaska. Image Credit: NCDC
In 2012, 25 states east of the Rocky Mountains experienced their warmest March ever recorded. Check out some of the individual reports showing the record warmth for the month of March 2012 from various National Weather Service offices across the United States:
Georgia
Alabama
Missouri
Minnesota
North Dakota
Illinois
Indiana
Why was it so warm?
Temperatures across the the North-Central Plains were seeing temperatures typically seen in the early summer months with temperatures nearly 30 to 40 degrees above average. The main explanation has to do with the synoptic or large-scale setup that occurred during the month of March. A large area of high pressure was situated east of the Rocky Mountains. Across the Pacific Northwest, a series of storm systems and troughs were digging across the area. The pattern was rather stagnant as nothing was able to push the area of high pressure out of our area. The warm temperatures pushed as far north into Canada. According to NOAA, a strong low level southerly jet was initiated and sustained by the greatly enhanced west-east pressure gradient between the abnormal low pressure over the western U.S. and abnormally high pressure over the Northeast United States. This feature was probably the single most critical factor responsible for the extreme magnitude of the heatwave. By late March 2012, the pattern finally budged as an upper level low pushed east and brought cooler temperatures.
Temperature anomoly across the globe. Note the colder temperatures in Asia and Alaska with the extreme warmth across the continuous United States and Canada. Image Credit: NCEP/NCAR
Global Warming?
Was global warming, aka climate change, responsible for this massive heatwave that occurred across the United States in March 2012? The best answer I can give you at this time is that – in a warming climate – extreme events such as heat waves, droughts, floods, and massive snowstorms are expected, as our atmosphere adjusts to an increase in greenhouse gases. However, we cannot specifically blame global climate change for the March 2012 U.S. heatwave. Whenever a significant weather story is released via the news, media erupts with stories on both sides of the global warming story. Some point to global warming as the cause of the event. Others just as loudly point to climate extremes from the past, and, in the case of the March 2012 U.S. heatwave, exceptionally cool temperatures on other parts of the globe. At this writing, the global picture for March 2012 from the National Climatic Data Center is not out yet, but look here. Maybe it’s out as you read this post.
The fact is that neither side of the media controversy (it is not a controversy among climate scientists, who almost unanimously agree Earth is warming) knows whether global warming caused the March 2012 U.S. heatwave. Perhaps it’s not even sensible to speak of a global cause of a local weather event, at least not until more time passes and we see the overall trends – and so can look back with hindsight. Remember, climate is defined as how the atmosphere behaves over relatively long periods of time. Weather is something that changes from day to day.
Weather is not climate. Meteorologists can use climatology for a specific area to get a grasp of the general weather that typically occurs for a location at that time of year. But, for example, recently as I have made forecasts, I have had to ignore climatology because the weather is not fitting the norm at this time.
With all of that said, if we continue to see such extreme events in the future, the long-term trends could indicate climate change. So the overall answer is this: we cannot blame global warming for the March 2012 U.S. heat wave. During March 2012, other areas around the globe were experiencing very cold temperatures. However, in a warming climate, extreme events such as this heatwave (and even colder than normal temperatures) can be expected.
According to Climate Central,
Record daily highs have been outpacing record daily lows in a pattern that has been shown to be inconsistent with natural climate variability alone. So far in 2012, the daily record-high to record-low ratio has been about 17-to-1. For monthly record highs compared to monthly record lows the ratio has been a lopsided 33-to-1 in favor of warm temperature records. If the climate were not warming, one would expect the ratios to be, on average, closer to 1-to-1.
Bottom line: March 2012 goes down in history as the warmest March across the contiguous United States since record-keeping began. Temperatures were 20-40 degrees above average in states such as Minnesota, South Dakota, North Dakota, and Illinois. Twenty five states east of the Rocky Mountains experienced their warmest March ever recorded. There were 15,272 warm records broken during the month of March 2012. The main feature that created this extreme warmth was an area of high pressure that dominated the weather east of the Rocky mountains providing warm, southerly winds to push far north into parts of Canada due to the jet stream that positioned along the United States/Canada border. For this time of the year, the jet stream is typically further south. We cannot exactly say that the record warmth was caused by global warming, but in a warming climate, extreme events such as the March 2012 U.S. heatwave are expected to occur more frequently, according to climate scientists.
Record breaking warmth across the United States in March 2012
Major warmth and severe flooding across US Great Plains
Decade 2001-2010 warmest since 1850, says WMO
Carbon dioxide increase in air helped end last Ice Age
Chris Field reports extreme weather on rise from climate change

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5 Responses to In March 2012, 15,000 warm temperature records broken in US

  1. EmptyJay says:
    In his previous story he was hyping record snowfalls in Alaska.
    Make up your mind!
    • Deborah Byrd says:
      Both can be true, in a world whose climate has become unstable. Climate extremes are a prediction of climate change models.
    • Matt Daniel says:
      Actually, not trying to hype anything. I don’t believe in hype. I only write about the facts that are blatantly in front of us. The weather pattern was very conducive for strong storms to push snow across Alaska and bring storminess to the Pacific Northwest. For the rest of the United States, a mix of La Niña, positive NAO, and a positive AO provided a warmer, less stormy winter.
  2. Invictus says:
    -Alaskan temperatures during March, which are not included in the contiguous U.S. average value, ranked as the tenth coolest on record, contributing to Alaska having its ninth coolest January-March period. The Alaskan year-to-date temperature was 5.2 degrees F below average.
    http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/sotc/national/
  3. [...] of the warmest March on record–is this climate change or a convergence of weather patterns? A great article posted by Matt Daniel of EarthSky examines the recent weather events in light of the climate change [...]
     
    end quote from: 
    http://earthsky.org/earth/in-march-2012-15000-warm-temperature-records-broken-in-us  
     
    My present understanding from researching all this myself since January is that when the Arctic almost completely melted out last summer and fall that it destabilized  the arctic Air Mass which as far as I know had never happened before in recorded history. Then, this air mass fell into Siberia, Russia, Europe and into North Africa which froze to death about 650 people or more and gave countless people frostbite and worse amputations of fingers, toes and noses. But, when the Arctic Air mass fell it also drew up behind it more tropical air from the tropics of mexico and further south up especially into the East Coast and mid west of the United States. The weather that is closest to normal (somewhat) is along the far western coast of the United States up into Canada and Alaska. However, Alaska is now cooler than normal. So, the dividing line of extreme change is somewhere between the Rocky Mountains and the California, Oregon and Washington Coast.

    However, most of the U.S. (with some exceptions) is in extreme drought and there is extreme worry in over half of the lower 48 states regarding having enough water to last until the next rainy season. However, it is possible that if the Arctic Melts out again in summer and fall that the arctic air mass might fall down into the U.S. next year and be below zero all the way into Mexico during the winter like it did to Siberia, Russia, Europe and North Africa this winter. Or it could do almost anything else unexpected as well. Time will tell.

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