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Everything posted by LibertyBell
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One thing this winter made me realize is you don't need a certain number of *inches* of snow to get a winter feel. Remember folks, the South Pole station in Antarctica gets less than 1 inch of snow a year and it is one of the most wintry places on the planet! So instead of measuring winters by snowfall inches, we should measure it by duration of snowcover and average temperatures. Whether it's 10 inches of snow or 50 inches of snow matters much less than 1) having many days below freezing 2) the lack of a thaw-- temperatures above 50 degrees 3) duration of snow cover 4) number of snowfall events. The actual amount of snowfall does not really matter. It's felt like a long winter because it has been.
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This was the only KU event from that winter for us KU event = at least one of the 4 major reporting stations near the city got 10.0 inches
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People downplay February 2024 but we had a 4 incher and a 6 incher in the same week.
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February 2024 was pretty good, a foot of snow in one week, can't complain.
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Maybe we could come up with a more statistically objective metric. How about this-- instead of *KU BENCHMARK* track, let's calculate the average snowfall by decade when the largest single snowfall in NYC is 1) 10.0 inches or more 2) 8.0 inches or more 3) 6.0 inches or more 4) 4.0 inches or more 5) less than 4.0 inches
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March 2001 would have made that season historic
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so the warming climate is enhancing the la nina base state
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the patient is dying, but we still need to treat that paper cut and bruised knee.
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Oops yes I confused the two, I meant 1990-91 with the unusual 36 hour 9 inch snowstorm!
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Funny thing is we looked back in disgust at the 80s and early 90s when we were in our snowy period between 02-03 and 17-18. But now we would love to have some of those winters lol.
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there were some very underrated winters back then that should be mentioned more often 1977-78 everyone knows about 1981-82 below 0 and two major snowstorms, one in April. 1982-83 had the big HECS of the decade 1986-87 multiple major snowstorms 1987-88 snowy first half of winter 1991-92 multiple major snowstorms
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1977-78 really stands out in that time period. And so does 1982-83, so you really want a moderate or strong el nino.
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Our snowy pattern began in 2002-03, what was our snowfall average from 02-03 through 17-18, Chris? And how many years in that period did we average between 20-30 inches of snow?
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Probably Atlantic City too then.
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Unfortunately nature loves to repeat herself as far as weather patterns are concerned.
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whats causing all this? Fukushima dumpage of nuclear waste into the Pacific done rather stupidly by Japan?
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you have to learn about significant digits, round everything to the nearest tenth lol.
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this was a rain changed to snow storm very high snowfall rates!
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But does it mean that climate change affects NYC more than it does DC or Baltimore in terms of snowfall because NYC is closer to the ocean?
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DC and Baltimore seem to be fine without them. The question is why is New York City (at a higher latitude) so dependent on them?
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It's very difficult to get above normal snowfall without a 4 inch snowstorm. Unless there is a very minor event in October, November, April or May that is.
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The only goals for this winter should be 1) get NYC their first 4 inch snowfall in years 2) get all local stations over 20 inches of snowfall 1 is more likely than 2, but it's possible we might get neither.
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Occasional Thoughts on Climate Change
LibertyBell replied to donsutherland1's topic in Climate Change
Using the word *alarmist* is particularly amusing, especially since it assumes it's something really bad. It's not, this is going to be the ultimate check on humanity and control its excesses. -
Occasional Thoughts on Climate Change
LibertyBell replied to donsutherland1's topic in Climate Change
humanity is an unsustainable species nature provides the corrective factor.