Anchorage Snowfall Sets Record
The official snow tally from latest storm in Anchorage brought the total winter snowfall to 134.5 inches or 11.2 feet, 1.9 inches above the previous record set in the winter of 1954-1955, the weather service said.
The official snow tally from latest storm in Anchorage brought the total winter snowfall to 134.5 inches or 11.2 feet, 1.9 inches above the previous record set in the winter of 1954-1955, the weather service said.
A 24-hour cold spell brought snow and rain to the Sahara Desert in western Algeria.
Maybe, there’s hope for people in hell who want ice water!
Does this go in my (gasp) global warming file?
Brittany Nunn/Amarillo Globe-News
Amarilloans wake to find 2.5 inches of snow on the ground and slushy conditions on the roads.
“…today’s amount breaks the record for amount of snow received (in Amarillo) on Oct. 27., which was previously set at 2.4 in 1911.
12.3 inches of snow in Hartford, Conn.. The previous record was 1.7 inches set on Oct. 10, 1979.
11.4 inches of snow in Worcester, Mass.. The old record was 7.5 inches set on Oct. 10, 1979.
5.2 inches of snow in Newark, N.J.. “The greatest amount of snow on any given day during the month of October.”
Concord, N.H., was blanketed by 13.6 inches of snow, breaking the old daily record of 0.2 of an inch set back in 1952.
Albany, N.Y., set a daily snow record with 3.8 inches of snow. The previous record was 0.4 of an inch set back in 2000.
Another daily snow record was set in Pittsburgh, Pa., on Saturday when 1.6 inches fell. The previous record was 0.6 of an inch from 2008.
Philadelphia got 0.3 of an inch of snow, breaking the old record of a trace for the date set way back in 1902. Likewise, Wilmington, Del., had 0.3 of an inch, surpassing the trace the city got in 2002.
The nation’s capital got a dusting of snow that set a new record. The 0.6 of an inch that fell on Saturday was unprecedented. Previously, Washington, D.C., had never received snow on Oct. 29.
At this rate some areas of the country may still be covered in snow when the 2012 winter begins!
I do not accept the premise! I understand how much you believe in your theory, but don’t try to destroy the many more that don’t accept your histrionics.
Al Gore says, One day climate change skeptics will be seen in the same negative light as racists, or so says former Vice President Al Gore.
The science is not so cut and dried as the former Vice President claims. For every scientist on the warming side, there’s at least one on the opposing side. And for all the claims that the levels of CO2 or GHGs are climbing, there has been no evidence that the earth is warming. In fact all the dire consequences of more hurricanes based on (gasp) global warming just have not materialized. There seems to be a much more substantial connection between the output from the sun than anything else.
Don’t try to paint me into the corner called racism. The analogy doesn’t hold.
Hat tip to TigerHawk for this thoughtful and informative discussion of (gasp) Global Warming:
There’s no room for voices in opposition!
I have been saying for years that (gasp) Global warming was a hoax. Now NASA has finally admitted that we are in or entering a cold period that will last 20 to 30 years based on their solar observations.
The Space and Science Research Center (SSRC) announces today that the most recent data from NASA describing the unusual behavior of the Sun validates a nearly four year long quest by SSRC Director John L. Casey to convince the US government, the media, and the public that we are heading into a new cold climate era with 20 to 30 years of record setting cold weather.
Now will you deniers sell the believers of global warming some blankets. They will be trading in their Hawaiian shirts for down jackets and Muk luks!
Accuweather reports:
This winter is on track to become the coldest for the nation as a whole since the 1980s or possibly even the late 1910s. According to AccuWeather.com Chief Long Range Forecaster Joe Bastardi, three or four out of the next five winters could be just as cold, if not colder.