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Record breaking March heat: Midwest USA and Canada

#6 User is offline   Dave K 

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Posted 20 March 2012 - 13:12

Quote

Posted on march 17th

Each year, when the list of coldest U.S. cities is compiled, International Falls, Minnesota regularly winds up at the top of the list, earning its title as "Icebox of the Nation". The city once hit -55°F (on January 6, 1909), and takes pride in the distinction of being the coldest city in the U.S., having trademarked the term "Icebox of the Nation" in 1948. The city recently defended the trademark against the town of Fraser, Colorado, which sought to usurp the title as the Nation's Icebox.

But yesterday, International Falls set a truly phenomenal weather record for warmth. The city's temperature soared to 77°F, which was 42° above the average high temperature for the date. Not only was it the city's hottest March temperature on record by 4°, it was just 4° shy of yesterday's high in Miami, Florida. But what was truly amazing is that the 77°F high in International Falls beat the previous record for the date by 22°! I talked to Christopher C. Burt, wunderground's weather historian, and he couldn't recall seeing a station with a century-plus period of weather records break a daily record by such a wide margin (International Falls' records go back to 1895.) Yesterday's temperatures in International Falls were but one chapter in the on-going story of one of the most extreme meteorological events in U.S. history. Never before has such an extended period of extreme and record-breaking warm temperatures affected such a large portion of the U.S. in March, going back to the beginning of record keeping in the late 1800s.

Jeff Masters: http://www.wundergro...l?entrynum=2054

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#7 User is online   Nigel Bolton 

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Posted 20 March 2012 - 22:24

Spoke to mys sister who lives just outside of Chicago, and she says it is wonderfully warm. She and her family are enjoying every last second.

N.
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#8 User is offline   Bazmundo 

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Posted 20 March 2012 - 23:23

Surface temp anomaly 8-15th March featured on Earth Observatory:
http://earthobservat...ew.php?id=77465
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#9 User is offline   Conrad 

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Posted 21 March 2012 - 04:23

To give you some idea of this record breaking heat in the eastern part of North America. Today Tuesday 20th March the High today in Montreal was 23C/73.4F, this is precisely 10C/18F higher than the previous high record for this date! and exactly 20C/36F higher than what is normal for this date.

There you go climate warming deniers. If this was July this type of synoptics would cause multiple deaths from heat stroke. Reports today from the Laurentian highlands north of here tell of people skiing in their bathing suits - a bit painful if you fall!

Climate warming seems to correlate with a higher frequency of extreme events, heatwaves, sometimes coldwaves, more droughts and more bad floods. More numerous and more destructive tornadoes.

In Canada the climate warming deniers now form the Federal government. They have been closing down all of the important environmental monitoring scientific stations. They have closed down the Ozone monitoring program for the entire Canadian section of the Arctic in spite of the fact that late last winter in 2011 the largest Ozone hole ever seen formed in the north arctic and subarctic regions of the northern hemisphere. This is clearly something that needs watching because of its health implications yet the Canadian government has cancelled the Ozone monitoring program and fired the scientists. Government employed scientists are no longer permitted to directly address the general public, instead whatever they have to say has to be monitored and approved by and filtered through government appointed PR people.

Things are going badly wrong here in Canada and yet somehow very few people outside of Canada seem to have any inkling that there is something badly wrong here.
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#10 User is offline   Dave K 

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Posted 21 March 2012 - 09:12

Quote

March 20th

Chicago-O’Hare

· This was the 7th consecutive day the record high for the date was at least tied.

· It was the 6th 80 degree day this March, extending the record for number of 80 degree days in March.

· The 85 degrees observed was the third warmest March temperature on record in Chicago, only surpassed by 87 degrees on March 31, 1981 and 88 degrees on March 29, 1986.

Rockford

· This was the 5th 80 degree day this March, extending the record for number of 80 degree days in March.

· The 83 degrees observed was the third warmest March temperature on record in Rockford, only surpassed by 84 degrees on March 31, 1986 and 85 degrees on March 29, 1986.


http://www.crh.noaa....=80740&source=0


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#11 User is online   John Mason 

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Posted 21 March 2012 - 09:23

For lovers of statistics, the overnight minimum in Rochester, Minnesota on March 18th was 2F warmer than the previous record high of 60F, set on March 18th 2010!

Cheers - John
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#12 User is offline   Dave K 

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Posted 21 March 2012 - 12:56


Quote

A warm, dry winter set up conditions to turn a warm spell into a March heat wave like nothing Ottawa has ever seen.

The heat came from the south of us, but we’ve had south winds before in March, and the temperature has never risen past 17 C.

On Tuesday it reached 25.1, continuing the week’s pattern of smashing records by eight or nine degrees each day. The old record was 14.6 C, in 1995.

Read more: http://www.ottawacit...l#ixzz1pktqZrvy



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#13 User is offline   AndrewJM 

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Posted 21 March 2012 - 22:32

The heat seems to be centred on Chicago which is currently the warmest city in the USA - very unusual, in fact I would hazard to say it is unheard of. Currently 85F at O'Hare and by contrast only 39F at Amarillio, TX
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#14 User is offline   Conrad 

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Posted 22 March 2012 - 03:42

Today Wednesday 21st March the heatwave continues in Montreal with an afternoon high of 26C/78.8FF but many locations in southern Ontario and southern Quebec went over 27C/80.6F this afternoon. I wonder where this exceptionally warm air has come from. In July SW winds arrive here after passing over the hotplate US but this is only the first day of Spring . Could anticyclonic subsidence account for a part of this warmth? Anyway tomorrow afternoon a cold front will approach us from the NNW. It's expected to set off a few showers or thundershowers and then temperatures will drop, they'll still be above normal for the time of year but not so extremely record breaking above normal as during the past few days. The air is rather humid too. This morning there was a ribbon of dense fog over the Saint Lawrence river, which is still very cold, but immediately away from the river it was perfectly clear.
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#15 User is online   Peter H 

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Posted 22 March 2012 - 08:18

View PostConrad, on 21 March 2012 - 04:23, said:

To give you some idea of this record breaking heat in the eastern part of North America. Today Tuesday 20th March the High today in Montreal was 23C/73.4F, this is precisely 10C/18F higher than the previous high record for this date! and exactly 20C/36F higher than what is normal for this date.

There you go climate warming deniers. If this was July this type of synoptics would cause multiple deaths from heat stroke. Reports today from the Laurentian highlands north of here tell of people skiing in their bathing suits - a bit painful if you fall!

Climate warming seems to correlate with a higher frequency of extreme events, heatwaves, sometimes coldwaves, more droughts and more bad floods. More numerous and more destructive tornadoes.

In Canada the climate warming deniers now form the Federal government. They have been closing down all of the important environmental monitoring scientific stations. They have closed down the Ozone monitoring program for the entire Canadian section of the Arctic in spite of the fact that late last winter in 2011 the largest Ozone hole ever seen formed in the north arctic and subarctic regions of the northern hemisphere. This is clearly something that needs watching because of its health implications yet the Canadian government has cancelled the Ozone monitoring program and fired the scientists. Government employed scientists are no longer permitted to directly address the general public, instead whatever they have to say has to be monitored and approved by and filtered through government appointed PR people.

Things are going badly wrong here in Canada and yet somehow very few people outside of Canada seem to have any inkling that there is something badly wrong here.


It does seem to be an extraordinarilly extraordinary spell in an increasingly extraordinary country. Dr jeff Masters has a good summary.
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#16 User is offline   Dave K 

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Posted 22 March 2012 - 09:18

Quote

March 21st

Chicago-O’Hare

· This was the 8th consecutive day the record high for the date was at least tied.

· It was the 7th 80 degree day this March, extending the record for number of 80 degree days in March.

· The 87 degrees observed was tied for the second warmest March temperature on record in Chicago, tied 87 degrees on March 31, 1981 and surpassed by 88 degrees on March 29, 1986.

Rockford

· This was the 6th 80 degree day this March, extending the record for number of 80 degree days in March.

· The 84 degrees observed was tied for the second warmest March temperature on record in Rockford, tied 84 degrees on March 31, 1986 and surpassed by 85 degrees on March 29, 1986.



http://www.crh.noaa....=80740&source=0

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#17 User is offline   Chris Alder 

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Posted 22 March 2012 - 10:18

I doubt I'll see 87f all year!
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#18 User is online   Peter H 

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Posted 22 March 2012 - 13:36

Weekly global temperatures. The anomalies (drop down box) over N America are huge.

Edit: in fact, such is the magnitude of the anomaly, that you can see it in the observation as a 'plume' up across the states.

This post has been edited by Peter H: 22 March 2012 - 13:38

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#19 User is online   John Mason 

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Posted 22 March 2012 - 17:47

From Dr Jeff Masters:

Pellston, MI: record high broken by 32°F
Pellston, Michigan in the Northern Lower Peninsula is called “Michigan’s Icebox”, since it frequently records the coldest temperatures in the state, and in the entire nation. But the past five days, Pellston has set five consecutive records for hottest March day. Yesterday’s 85° reading broke the previous record for the date (53° in 2007) by a ridiculous 32°, and was an absurd 48°F above average.

Low temperatures beat the previous record high for the date at two stations
The low temperature at Marquette, Michigan was 52° yesterday, which was 3° warmer than the previous record high for the date! The low at Mt. Washington, NH yesterday (44°) also beat the previous record high for the date (43°.)

Multiple Canadian cites break all-time April records for warmth in March
Not only was yesterday the warmest March day in recorded history for many of Canada’s major cities, it was also warmer than any April day at many locations. St. John, New Brunswick hit 25.4°C (78°F.) Not only did this crush the record high for March (previous record: 17.5°C), it is well above any temperature ever measured in April (extreme April temperature on record: 22.8°C.) Halifax, Nova Scotia hit 25.8°C yesterday, beating their all-time March record of 25.6°, and their all-time April record of 26.3°C, set on April 30, 2004. Other major cities in Canada that set all-time warmest March records yesterday included Ottawa (27.4°C), Montreal (25.8°C), Windsor (27.8°C), Hamilton (25.6°C), London (26.4°C), and Fredericton (27.1°C)….

Summer in March warmth crushes records in Michigan
Yesterday, nearly every major airport in Michigan’s Lower Peninsula broke the record they set the previous day for their hottest March temperature, including Detroit (84°), Flint (86°F, just 2° below their all-time April record), Saginaw (87°F, just 2° below their all-time April record), Grand Rapids (87°), Muskegon (82°), Lansing (86°), Alpena (87°), Gaylord (83°, which was 26° above the average high for the date), Pellston (85°), Houghton Lake (85°), and Traverse City (87°, which was which was 45°F above the average high for the date, and was the fifth consecutive day they tied or broke their record for hottest March temperature, and just 3° below their record high temperature of 90° for April.) In Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, Sault Ste. Marie’s 83° (26° above the average high for the date) crushed the previous March record by 8°, and was only 2° shy of the warmest temperature ever measured in April.




Cheers - John



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#20 User is offline   DG57 

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Posted 22 March 2012 - 18:00

I can only say Oh my!

The American continent is known for its extremes, whatever they are, geological, biological, climatological or meteorological, but it's always and still impressive to hear these!

I wanna travel to the USA so badly! :( Anyone wants to bring me in his bag? I'm small enough. :D
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#21 User is online   John Mason 

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Posted 22 March 2012 - 18:11

Too hot for me, Morgane! A nice 22C will do me....

Cheers - John
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#22 User is offline   Dave K 

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Posted 22 March 2012 - 18:21

The margins by which previous records are being broken is staggering. It is totally inconceivable that any UK location record for high temperature on any day could be broken by 20 °C! It's just insane :blink:
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#23 User is offline   DG57 

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Posted 22 March 2012 - 18:25

View PostJohn Mason, on 22 March 2012 - 18:11, said:

Too hot for me, Morgane! A nice 22C will do me....

Cheers - John


I was not only talking about the weather, but also about the landscapes. I love seeing beautiful ones, and being emotionally "taken" by them. :)

Who could resist to this?:

Posted Image

Sorry for putting a picture, I can't help doing that! hehe

I agree with you Dave, it's completely insane, I'd say even for the whole of Europe!

This post has been edited by MorganeLanesle: 22 March 2012 - 18:26

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#24 User is offline   Dave K 

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Posted 23 March 2012 - 09:27

Quote

- In Chicago, the warmest March on record occurred in 1910 and then in 1945, which both averaged 48.6 degrees. Through March 21th, the average monthly temperature for March 2012 for Chicago-O’Hare was an amazing 53.5, which would already break the record!

- Chicago's average temperature for the first 21 days of March is 53.5°. Not only would this shatter the record for the warmest March ever, it would tie for the 7th warmest April ever in Chicago. Similarly for Rockford, the average temperature for the first 21 days of March would rank above the 19th warmest April.


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#25 User is offline   Dave K 

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Posted 23 March 2012 - 16:35

On the way out now by the looks of it

Quote

Remarkable late-season snow storm on West Coast
The convoluted jet stream pattern that brought Summer in March conditions to the Eastern U.S. and Canada is also bringing record snows to Oregon. Eugene, Oregon picked up 7.5 inches of snow yesterday, the largest snowstorm this late in the year on record. The previous record was a 7.6" snow storm on March 5 - 7, 1951. Snow amounts as high as 32" have been recorded in the Oregon Cascades over the past few days.

A loop in the jet stream has created a large upper-level ridge of high pressure that is stuck in place over the Eastern U.S., and large upper-level trough of low pressure over the Western U.S. Since the jet stream acts as the boundary between cold air to the north and warm air to the south, and the large loop in the jet places its axis far to the north of the eastern U.S., summer-like warmth has developed over the eastern half of the U.S. Conversely, colder than average temperatures have developed over the western third of the U.S. behind the southwards-dipping loop of the jet stream.

This jet stream pattern was too extreme to be stable, and the big loop over the Western U.S. has broken off to form a giant eddy. The resulting area of low pressure is known as a "cut-off low", because it is cut off from the jet stream. The cut-off low is drifting slowly eastwards, and will bring an end to "Summer in March" over the Eastern half of the U.S. by Friday.

http://www.wundergro...rs/article.html

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