Central Park goes more than 650 days Without an Inch of Snow — nearly Doubling the Record

anybody can say anything with no proof, abu afuk proves that
c
Watch how easy it is to make abu afuk lose his/her mind.

Post the actual temperatures going back 100,000 years. Not some adjusted bullshit expressed as +1.1c, post the temperatures, in something that makes sense, like 70 degree F.


Now watch abu afuck, flip and flop like a fish on the deck of a boat
LOL
You are so GD Stupid/Dishonest you try and get away with a transparent attempt at LYING, Burden Shifting, and a side order of 'Demand Endless detail FALLACY.'

I put up TEN Links from the NY Times to Scientific American, to Forbes, to NOAA (who actually gathers the temps/data) and many more.

Those are credible links/"facts"/One Fact confirmed by many.
So much so, the Burden is now on YOU to show how these esteemed sources are wrong/'Lying.'
I do NOT have to put up a list of 100,000 years of temps, you IDIOT!

`
 
LOL
You are so GD Stupid/Dishonest you try and get away with a transparent attempt at LYING, Burden Shifting, and a side order of 'Demand Endless detail FALLACY.'

I put up TEN Links from the NY Times to Scientific American, to Forbes, to NOAA (who actually gathers the temps/data) and many more.

Those are credible links/"facts"/One Fact confirmed by many.
So much so, the Burden is now on YOU to show how these esteemed sources are wrong/'Lying.'
I do NOT have to put up a list of 100,000 years of temps, you IDIOT!

`
Hahaha, if what you said was true, you would need no links.

Like I stated, when asked for the temperatures Abu afuk is going to cry like a baby, "but, but, I linked, and did a Google search and they said I am right", Abu cries.

Post the temperatures, nope, Abu afuk can't do that.

A crybaby worm claiming links from Google proves everything
 
abu afak still has failed to post the temperatures.

We all know Abu is great at using Google providing us with dozens of links (irrelevant). .
So it is obvious that Abu searched and can not come up with actual temperatures to prove his/her opinion.

We’re experiencing Earth’s hottest weather in 120,000 years, and it’s just getting started

BY JEFF BERARDELLI - 07/08/23


It’s quite the claim: This week, Earth broke an unofficial record for its hottest day in 120,000 years. Actually, the Earth broke that record three times — on Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday, according to the University of Maine’s Climate Reanalyzer.

El Niño (a natural cycle) is just getting started. As it gets stronger, and adds more heat to Earth’s system, this summer will continue to set new all-time global records for hot days. And along with that, many other records will be shattered as well.

But no matter how hot it gets, the summer of 2023 will soon be considered a “cool” summer in a couple of decades amid the steady drumbeat of human-caused climate heating.
When will El Niño peak?

How can experts be so confident of these bold assertions? As a climate specialist, I’ll do my best to explain. It’s all fairly simple — and fully expected — by the climate science community.
First, researchers know using observations that temperatures over the past decade have been warmer than any ever seen since record-keeping began in the 1800s. Since then, Earth has warmed by 1.2 degrees Celsius (2 degrees Fahrenheit).

Scientists also know through sophisticated methods of examining copious climate clues in proxy data like tree rings, ice cores, ocean sediments, etc. that Earth’s average temperature has not been this warm since the ice age ended 20,000 years ago.

The message is quite simple and stark, when seen on the visual below. Earth’s temperature has skyrocketed since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution, and it’s projected to keep climbing.

LAST-20K-YEARS-WARMING-1.png
(WFLA/Jeff Berardelli, adapted from Don’t Mention the Emergency)
The rate of warming today is unprecedented in the 20,000 years shown. In fact, coming out of the last ice age, it took 10,000 years for the Earth’s average temperature to warm 3 degrees C.

Astonishingly, humans — due to the burning of fossil fuels and greenhouse gas emissions — will likely cause the same amount of warming in 200 years. That means our current warming rate is 50 times that of the natural warming rate that proceeded the most recent ice age.

Between 10,000 years ago and today’s rapid man-made warming, Earth’s average temperature was relatively constant, allowing human civilizations to thrive. There were disruptive regional cooling episodes like the disparate Little Ice Age events, but the impact on overall global temperature was relatively minor.

Since at the peak of the last ice age, Earth’s average temperature was about 10 degrees cooler than today, and it has not been this warm since before the last ice age. We call that time the “last interglacial” (in-between glacial periods) which peaked around 125,000 years ago.


climate-GLOBAL-AVERAGE-TEMPERATURE-LAST-MILLION-YEARS-GFX.jpg
A visual illustrates the last 1 million years of global temperatures with cold glacial periods and warm interglacials. (WFLA/Jeff Berardelli)

Proxy data shows that the average global temperature during the last interglacial was about 1 degree Celsius warmer than today. During that time, scientists estimate the sea level was 30 feet higher than today. With continued warming, the past warns that future generations may very well have to deal with that same kind of rising sea level.

What U.S. cities will look like with sea-level rise, according to scientific projections
In fact, the Earth can expect to gain another degree of warming by mid-century, putting it on par with the temperatures of the last interglacial. And by the end of the century, if carbon emissions aren’t curbed, we may very well experience the hottest temperatures in over 1 million years.
[.......]


`
 
Last edited:

We’re experiencing Earth’s hottest weather in 120,000 years, and it’s just getting started

BY JEFF BERARDELLI - 07/08/23


It’s quite the claim: This week, Earth broke an unofficial record for its hottest day in 120,000 years. Actually, the Earth broke that record three times — on Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday, according to the University of Maine’s Climate Reanalyzer.

El Niño (a natural cycle) is just getting started. As it gets stronger, and adds more heat to Earth’s system, this summer will continue to set new all-time global records for hot days. And along with that, many other records will be shattered as well.

But no matter how hot it gets, the summer of 2023 will soon be considered a “cool” summer in a couple of decades amid the steady drumbeat of human-caused climate heating.
When will El Niño peak?

How can experts be so confident of these bold assertions? As a climate specialist, I’ll do my best to explain. It’s all fairly simple — and fully expected — by the climate science community.
First, researchers know using observations that temperatures over the past decade have been warmer than any ever seen since record-keeping began in the 1800s. Since then, Earth has warmed by 1.2 degrees Celsius (2 degrees Fahrenheit).

Scientists also know through sophisticated methods of examining copious climate clues in proxy data like tree rings, ice cores, ocean sediments, etc. that Earth’s average temperature has not been this warm since the ice age ended 20,000 years ago.

The message is quite simple and stark, when seen on the visual below. Earth’s temperature has skyrocketed since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution, and it’s projected to keep climbing.

LAST-20K-YEARS-WARMING-1.png
(WFLA/Jeff Berardelli, adapted from Don’t Mention the Emergency)
The rate of warming today is unprecedented in the 20,000 years shown. In fact, coming out of the last ice age, it took 10,000 years for the Earth’s average temperature to warm 3 degrees C.

Astonishingly, humans — due to the burning of fossil fuels and greenhouse gas emissions — will likely cause the same amount of warming in 200 years. That means our current warming rate is 50 times that of the natural warming rate that proceeded the most recent ice age.

Between 10,000 years ago and today’s rapid man-made warming, Earth’s average temperature was relatively constant, allowing human civilizations to thrive. There were disruptive regional cooling episodes like the disparate Little Ice Age events, but the impact on overall global temperature was relatively minor.

Since at the peak of the last ice age, Earth’s average temperature was about 10 degrees cooler than today, and it has not been this warm since before the last ice age. We call that time the “last interglacial” (in-between glacial periods) which peaked around 125,000 years ago.


climate-GLOBAL-AVERAGE-TEMPERATURE-LAST-MILLION-YEARS-GFX.jpg
A visual illustrates the last 1 million years of global temperatures with cold glacial periods and warm interglacials. (WFLA/Jeff Berardelli)

Proxy data shows that the average global temperature during the last interglacial was about 1 degree Celsius warmer than today. During that time, scientists estimate the sea level was 30 feet higher than today. With continued warming, the past warns that future generations may very well have to deal with that same kind of rising sea level.

What U.S. cities will look like with sea-level rise, according to scientific projections
In fact, the Earth can expect to gain another degree of warming by mid-century, putting it on par with the temperatures of the last interglacial. And by the end of the century, if carbon emissions aren’t curbed, we may very well experience the hottest temperatures in over 1 million years.
[.......]


`
If the entire atmosphere is only 44% effective at trapping its theoretical GHG effect because of weather, why do you believe an increase of 280 ppm of CO2 would be 450% effective at trapping its theoretical GHG effect?
 

We’re experiencing Earth’s hottest weather in 120,000 years, and it’s just getting started

BY JEFF BERARDELLI - 07/08/23


It’s quite the claim: This week, Earth broke an unofficial record for its hottest day in 120,000 years. Actually, the Earth broke that record three times — on Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday, according to the University of Maine’s Climate Reanalyzer.

El Niño (a natural cycle) is just getting started. As it gets stronger, and adds more heat to Earth’s system, this summer will continue to set new all-time global records for hot days. And along with that, many other records will be shattered as well.

But no matter how hot it gets, the summer of 2023 will soon be considered a “cool” summer in a couple of decades amid the steady drumbeat of human-caused climate heating.
When will El Niño peak?

How can experts be so confident of these bold assertions? As a climate specialist, I’ll do my best to explain. It’s all fairly simple — and fully expected — by the climate science community.
First, researchers know using observations that temperatures over the past decade have been warmer than any ever seen since record-keeping began in the 1800s. Since then, Earth has warmed by 1.2 degrees Celsius (2 degrees Fahrenheit).

Scientists also know through sophisticated methods of examining copious climate clues in proxy data like tree rings, ice cores, ocean sediments, etc. that Earth’s average temperature has not been this warm since the ice age ended 20,000 years ago.

The message is quite simple and stark, when seen on the visual below. Earth’s temperature has skyrocketed since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution, and it’s projected to keep climbing.

LAST-20K-YEARS-WARMING-1.png
(WFLA/Jeff Berardelli, adapted from Don’t Mention the Emergency)
The rate of warming today is unprecedented in the 20,000 years shown. In fact, coming out of the last ice age, it took 10,000 years for the Earth’s average temperature to warm 3 degrees C.

Astonishingly, humans — due to the burning of fossil fuels and greenhouse gas emissions — will likely cause the same amount of warming in 200 years. That means our current warming rate is 50 times that of the natural warming rate that proceeded the most recent ice age.

Between 10,000 years ago and today’s rapid man-made warming, Earth’s average temperature was relatively constant, allowing human civilizations to thrive. There were disruptive regional cooling episodes like the disparate Little Ice Age events, but the impact on overall global temperature was relatively minor.

Since at the peak of the last ice age, Earth’s average temperature was about 10 degrees cooler than today, and it has not been this warm since before the last ice age. We call that time the “last interglacial” (in-between glacial periods) which peaked around 125,000 years ago.


climate-GLOBAL-AVERAGE-TEMPERATURE-LAST-MILLION-YEARS-GFX.jpg
A visual illustrates the last 1 million years of global temperatures with cold glacial periods and warm interglacials. (WFLA/Jeff Berardelli)

Proxy data shows that the average global temperature during the last interglacial was about 1 degree Celsius warmer than today. During that time, scientists estimate the sea level was 30 feet higher than today. With continued warming, the past warns that future generations may very well have to deal with that same kind of rising sea level.

What U.S. cities will look like with sea-level rise, according to scientific projections
In fact, the Earth can expect to gain another degree of warming by mid-century, putting it on par with the temperatures of the last interglacial. And by the end of the century, if carbon emissions aren’t curbed, we may very well experience the hottest temperatures in over 1 million years.
[.......]


`

It’s quite the claim:

Quite the silly claim.

Astonishingly, humans — due to the burning of fossil fuels and greenhouse gas emissions — will likely cause the same amount of warming in 200 years.

If only we had technology to allow us to cope with a bit of warming.
 

We’re experiencing Earth’s hottest weather in 120,000 years, and it’s just getting started

BY JEFF BERARDELLI - 07/08/23


It’s quite the claim: This week, Earth broke an unofficial record for its hottest day in 120,000 years. Actually, the Earth broke that record three times — on Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday, according to the University of Maine’s Climate Reanalyzer.

El Niño (a natural cycle) is just getting started. As it gets stronger, and adds more heat to Earth’s system, this summer will continue to set new all-time global records for hot days. And along with that, many other records will be shattered as well.

But no matter how hot it gets, the summer of 2023 will soon be considered a “cool” summer in a couple of decades amid the steady drumbeat of human-caused climate heating.
When will El Niño peak?

How can experts be so confident of these bold assertions? As a climate specialist, I’ll do my best to explain. It’s all fairly simple — and fully expected — by the climate science community.
First, researchers know using observations that temperatures over the past decade have been warmer than any ever seen since record-keeping began in the 1800s. Since then, Earth has warmed by 1.2 degrees Celsius (2 degrees Fahrenheit).

Scientists also know through sophisticated methods of examining copious climate clues in proxy data like tree rings, ice cores, ocean sediments, etc. that Earth’s average temperature has not been this warm since the ice age ended 20,000 years ago.

The message is quite simple and stark, when seen on the visual below. Earth’s temperature has skyrocketed since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution, and it’s projected to keep climbing.

LAST-20K-YEARS-WARMING-1.png
(WFLA/Jeff Berardelli, adapted from Don’t Mention the Emergency)
The rate of warming today is unprecedented in the 20,000 years shown. In fact, coming out of the last ice age, it took 10,000 years for the Earth’s average temperature to warm 3 degrees C.

Astonishingly, humans — due to the burning of fossil fuels and greenhouse gas emissions — will likely cause the same amount of warming in 200 years. That means our current warming rate is 50 times that of the natural warming rate that proceeded the most recent ice age.

Between 10,000 years ago and today’s rapid man-made warming, Earth’s average temperature was relatively constant, allowing human civilizations to thrive. There were disruptive regional cooling episodes like the disparate Little Ice Age events, but the impact on overall global temperature was relatively minor.

Since at the peak of the last ice age, Earth’s average temperature was about 10 degrees cooler than today, and it has not been this warm since before the last ice age. We call that time the “last interglacial” (in-between glacial periods) which peaked around 125,000 years ago.


climate-GLOBAL-AVERAGE-TEMPERATURE-LAST-MILLION-YEARS-GFX.jpg
A visual illustrates the last 1 million years of global temperatures with cold glacial periods and warm interglacials. (WFLA/Jeff Berardelli)

Proxy data shows that the average global temperature during the last interglacial was about 1 degree Celsius warmer than today. During that time, scientists estimate the sea level was 30 feet higher than today. With continued warming, the past warns that future generations may very well have to deal with that same kind of rising sea level.

What U.S. cities will look like with sea-level rise, according to scientific projections
In fact, the Earth can expect to gain another degree of warming by mid-century, putting it on par with the temperatures of the last interglacial. And by the end of the century, if carbon emissions aren’t curbed, we may very well experience the hottest temperatures in over 1 million years.
[.......]


`
I said post the temperatures. You know, readable temperatures.

Hers is an example
May 1979 Los Angeles 70°
Post the temperatures going back as far as you can.

Articles mean nothing
 

We’re experiencing Earth’s hottest weather in 120,000 years, and it’s just getting started

BY JEFF BERARDELLI - 07/08/23


It’s quite the claim: This week, Earth broke an unofficial record for its hottest day in 120,000 years. Actually, the Earth broke that record three times — on Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday, according to the University of Maine’s Climate Reanalyzer.

El Niño (a natural cycle) is just getting started. As it gets stronger, and adds more heat to Earth’s system, this summer will continue to set new all-time global records for hot days. And along with that, many other records will be shattered as well.

But no matter how hot it gets, the summer of 2023 will soon be considered a “cool” summer in a couple of decades amid the steady drumbeat of human-caused climate heating.
When will El Niño peak?

How can experts be so confident of these bold assertions? As a climate specialist, I’ll do my best to explain. It’s all fairly simple — and fully expected — by the climate science community.
First, researchers know using observations that temperatures over the past decade have been warmer than any ever seen since record-keeping began in the 1800s. Since then, Earth has warmed by 1.2 degrees Celsius (2 degrees Fahrenheit).

Scientists also know through sophisticated methods of examining copious climate clues in proxy data like tree rings, ice cores, ocean sediments, etc. that Earth’s average temperature has not been this warm since the ice age ended 20,000 years ago.

The message is quite simple and stark, when seen on the visual below. Earth’s temperature has skyrocketed since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution, and it’s projected to keep climbing.

LAST-20K-YEARS-WARMING-1.png
(WFLA/Jeff Berardelli, adapted from Don’t Mention the Emergency)
The rate of warming today is unprecedented in the 20,000 years shown. In fact, coming out of the last ice age, it took 10,000 years for the Earth’s average temperature to warm 3 degrees C.

Astonishingly, humans — due to the burning of fossil fuels and greenhouse gas emissions — will likely cause the same amount of warming in 200 years. That means our current warming rate is 50 times that of the natural warming rate that proceeded the most recent ice age.

Between 10,000 years ago and today’s rapid man-made warming, Earth’s average temperature was relatively constant, allowing human civilizations to thrive. There were disruptive regional cooling episodes like the disparate Little Ice Age events, but the impact on overall global temperature was relatively minor.

Since at the peak of the last ice age, Earth’s average temperature was about 10 degrees cooler than today, and it has not been this warm since before the last ice age. We call that time the “last interglacial” (in-between glacial periods) which peaked around 125,000 years ago.


climate-GLOBAL-AVERAGE-TEMPERATURE-LAST-MILLION-YEARS-GFX.jpg
A visual illustrates the last 1 million years of global temperatures with cold glacial periods and warm interglacials. (WFLA/Jeff Berardelli)

Proxy data shows that the average global temperature during the last interglacial was about 1 degree Celsius warmer than today. During that time, scientists estimate the sea level was 30 feet higher than today. With continued warming, the past warns that future generations may very well have to deal with that same kind of rising sea level.

What U.S. cities will look like with sea-level rise, according to scientific projections
In fact, the Earth can expect to gain another degree of warming by mid-century, putting it on par with the temperatures of the last interglacial. And by the end of the century, if carbon emissions aren’t curbed, we may very well experience the hottest temperatures in over 1 million years.
[.......]


`


"Proxy data" meaning no real data.

DURRRRRR
 
I said post the temperatures. You know, readable temperatures.

Hers is an example - May 1979 Los Angeles 70°

Post the temperatures going back as far as you can.

Articles mean nothing
First of all Stupid, we are talking Global, not local.
So you also would Deny Every chart and graph EVER posted in this section unless the poster can give you an exact Temperature for a Day/Month in a City/Locale or even planet.

IOW, you Deny the last Ice Age (and it's peak low) unless unless I can give you, ie, the Temperature in Los Angeles for June of 19,864 BC.
(PS: we use Ice cores and other data for historic Temp reconstruction)

You FU***** Idiot you just Destroyed yourself AGAIN here with your 12 IQ attempt Climate denial.
ALL Climate for ALL times.
Every Graph EVER Posted on USMB is invalid unless the poster can give you a Temperature for a month/Year (in a City no less) you Unbelievable Dope.

`
 
Last edited:
First of all Stupid, we are talking Global, not local.
So you also would Deny Every chart and graph EVER posted in this section unless the poster can give you an exact Temperature for a Day/Month in a City/Locale or even planet.

IOW, you Deny the last Ice Age (and it's peak low) unless unless I can give you, ie, the Temperature in Los Angeles for June of 19,864 BC.
(PS: we use Ice cores and other data for historic Temp reconstruction)

You FU***** Idiot you just Destroyed yourself AGAIN here with your 12 IQ attempt Climate denial.
ALL Climate for ALL times.
Every Graph EVER Posted on USMB is invalid unless the poster can give you a Temperature for a month/Year (in a City no less) you Unbelievable Dope.

`
Graphs are made from actual temperatures, if not the mean nothing.

The actual temperatures would show nothing abnormal is happening.

Another Abu afuk failure.
 
LOL
You are so GD Stupid/Dishonest you try and get away with a transparent attempt at LYING, Burden Shifting, and a side order of 'Demand Endless detail FALLACY.'

I put up TEN Links from the NY Times to Scientific American, to Forbes, to NOAA (who actually gathers the temps/data) and many more.

Those are credible links/"facts"/One Fact confirmed by many.
So much so, the Burden is now on YOU to show how these esteemed sources are wrong/'Lying.'
I do NOT have to put up a list of 100,000 years of temps, you IDIOT!

`
Calm down. The sun will still rise in the morning.

Seriously, I believe the 650 day snow drought. I do not believe the "hottest ______" in history.
 
It is amazing, a city on the Ocean, stays warm enough not to have snow.

How unusual for a city on a warm body of water not to have snow.

A big hot, heat island effect city stays warm snuggled up to the ocean.

If only science could tell us how this happened

Or if only science could tell us how many solar panels we must build until manufacturing causes it to snow
 
First of all Stupid, we are talking Global, not local.
So you also would Deny Every chart and graph EVER posted in this section unless the poster can give you an exact Temperature for a Day/Month in a City/Locale or even planet.

IOW, you Deny the last Ice Age (and it's peak low) unless unless I can give you, ie, the Temperature in Los Angeles for June of 19,864 BC.
(PS: we use Ice cores and other data for historic Temp reconstruction)

You FU***** Idiot you just Destroyed yourself AGAIN here with your 12 IQ attempt Climate denial.
ALL Climate for ALL times.
Every Graph EVER Posted on USMB is invalid unless the poster can give you a Temperature for a month/Year (in a City no less) you Unbelievable Dope.

`
If the entire atmosphere is only 44% effective at trapping its theoretical GHG effect because of weather, why do you believe an increase of 280 ppm of CO2 would be 450% effective at trapping its theoretical GHG effect?
 
If the entire atmosphere is only 44% effective at trapping its theoretical GHG effect because of weather, why do you believe an increase of 280 ppm of CO2 would be 450% effective at trapping its theoretical GHG effect?
MAGIC!
 

After 701 days, New York City finally sees at least an Inch of Snow in a Day


Residents across The Bronx and New York City woke up this morning to a city blanketed in light snow with an inch of accumulation since midnight and finally ending the Longest Dry-spell of significant snow in history falling in a single day.

It’s hard to believe but the last record of significant snow accumulation was February 13, 2022 when 1.6 inches of snow
was recorded in Central Park.


The 701 day streak shattered the previous record which was broken on March 21, 1998 when the city went just over a year with 400 days without significant snow recorded.



`

1707938108714.png
 

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