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Tuesday, January 10, 2012

FIRST WEEK OF JANUARY DRIEST IN U.S. RECORDED HISTORY

If this pattern keeps up for the whole winter, you’ll be seeing a bunch of ski resort bankruptcies in the spring. The 2nd more disturbing issue could be drought conditions in the Midwest causing issues for our crops. Too soon to ring the alarm bells. How can the climate change extremists make their case based upon science when they don’t even understand how the jet stream functions from week to week?

Remarkably dry and warm winter due to record extreme jet stream configuration

By Dr. Jeff Masters

Flowers are sprouting in January in New Hampshire, the Sierra Mountains in California are nearly snow-free, and lakes in much of Michigan still have not frozen. It’s 2012, and the new year is ringing in another ridiculously wacky winter for the U.S. In Fargo, North Dakota yesterday, the mercury soared to 55°F, breaking a 1908 record for warmest January day in recorded history. More than 99% of North Dakota had no snow on the ground this morning, and over 95% of the country that normally has snow at this time of year had below-average snow cover. High temperatures in Nebraska yesterday were in the 60s, more than 30° above average.

Storm activity has been almost nil over the past week over the entire U.S., with the jet stream bottled up far to the north in Canada. It has been remarkable to look at the radar display day after day and see virtually no echoes, and it is very likely that this has been the driest first week of January in U.S. recorded history.

Portions of northern New England, the Upper Midwest, and the mountains of the Western U.S. that are normally under a foot of more of snow by now have no snow, or just a dusting of less than an inch. Approximately half of the U.S. had temperatures at least 5°F above average during the month of December, with portions of North Dakota and Minnesota seeing temperatures 9°F above average. The strangely warm and dry start to winter is not limited to the U.S–all of continental Europe experienced well above-average temperatures during December.

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5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Oh my this bring out Al Gore and Global warming idiots feed them some crap

Daddio said...

But parts of Alaska have been buried in the white stuf ...

Anonymous said...

Ask Huston about rain.

Anonymous said...

60 degrees in December and January? You think that's normal?

Anonymous said...

Approximately half of the U.S. had temperatures at least 5°F above average during the month of December, with portions of North Dakota and Minnesota seeing temperatures 9°F above average. The strangely warm and dry start to winter is not limited to the U.S–all of continental Europe experienced well above-average temperatures during December.