heat wave

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heat wave

Postby neal b » Wed Aug 08, 2007 5:18 pm

how is everybody making it with this heat here in rosebud mo it has been 100+ for the last 5 days with no rain for two weeks here they say its giong to be over 100 again tomorrow :cry: :sweaty:

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Postby raprap » Wed Aug 08, 2007 5:26 pm

Listened to Dan Katz on the Dog Days (named so because Sirus-the dog star--rises with the sun this time of year) and he recommended that we behave like animals instead of urban metrosexuals when it gets this hot. Dogs, after all, take care of their business early before the heat of the day hits, and fine shady spots to sleep (estivate?) in the heat of the day.

In the Ohio Valley it's been in the high 90's (with heat index >100) all week. No relief in sight--and the pop up thunderstorms only raise the humidity. The ground is so dry its cracking.

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Postby mandy » Wed Aug 08, 2007 5:55 pm

Here in Albuquerque it's been nice cause we are in monsoon season. Today it got to about 90 degrees but the evening thunderstorms will cool us down to about 70-68 degrees. The storms bring us much needed water. Only thing I don't like about the monsoon season is to the flash flooding.
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Postby halfdome, Danny » Wed Aug 08, 2007 6:22 pm

Maybe you need to take a vacation in the TD to Washington state during the hot weather. Today it's 70 deg, mild with clear blue sky. :D Danny
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Postby mikeschn » Wed Aug 08, 2007 6:44 pm

It's even too hot in MI to build a teardrop. :cry:

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Postby Esteban » Wed Aug 08, 2007 7:06 pm

It's sunny and 69 today in San Luis Obispo, CA. A seven day forecast shows the days ahead in mid to upper 70s. It's been cooler than usual for this time of year.

:D :) 8)
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Postby Kurt (Indiana) » Wed Aug 08, 2007 7:11 pm

The old '65 Mustang is (usually) great fun to drive to work. The one hour (each way) commute is getting a little old wth the 95 degree temps. :cry: The AC is not hooked up and it's HOT but it's still fun. :thumbsup: It reminds me of my summers 42 years ago. Then I didn't want AC because of the drain on the performance. Now it's just because it's not hooked up.

Boy! that cold beer really feels good when I get home. :applause:
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Postby len19070 » Thu Aug 09, 2007 1:51 am

Outside Philadelphia, PA. Wednesday it was 105 degrees. All week its been near 100 degrees. And very high Humidity.

Thats like Africa Hot.

Theres a cold front coming in for Thursday...Only 98 degrees.

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Postby SkipperSue » Thu Aug 09, 2007 5:11 am

:shock:
Last edited by SkipperSue on Sat Aug 11, 2007 5:51 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Postby Scooter » Thu Aug 09, 2007 10:13 am

We've hit 103+ for six consecutive days here in the geographic center of TN. Up the road 30 miles to Nashville, they've had the most consecutive 100 degree days since 1990.

I'm sick of it. :cry:
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Postby caseydog » Thu Aug 09, 2007 10:32 am

I read this article this morning. It has been a weird year everywhere.

Published on Wednesday, August 8, 2007 by the Sydney Morning Herald/Australia

Wild Weather a Taste of Things to Come
by Marc Kaufman

A MONSOON dropped 35 centimetres of rain in one day across many parts of South Asia this month. Germany had its wettest May on record, and April was the driest there in a century. Temperatures reached 45 degrees in Bulgaria last month and 32 degrees in Moscow in late May, shattering long-time records.

The year still has almost five months to go, but it has already experienced a range of weather extremes that the UN’s World Meteorological Organisation says is well outside the historical norm and is a precursor to much greater weather variability as global warming transforms the planet.

The warming trend confirmed in February by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change - based on the finding that 11 of the past 12 years had higher average ground temperatures than any others since formal temperature recording began - appears to have continued with a vengeance into 2007. The meteorological organisation reported that January and April were the warmest worldwide ever recorded.

“Climate change projections indicate it to be very likely that hot extremes, heatwaves and heavy precipitation events will continue to become more frequent,” the organisation said.

The heavy rains in South Asia have resulted in more than 500 deaths and displaced 10 million people, while 13.5 million Chinese have been affected by floods, the report said. In England and Wales, the period from May to July was the wettest since record-keeping began in 1766, resulting in floods that killed nine and caused more than $US6billion ($7billion) in damage.

The World Meteorological Organisation, which is co-sponsoring a series of meetings and reports on global climate change, is putting together an early-warning system for climate extremes and establishing long-term monitoring systems, and plans to help countries most vulnerable to climate change.

“The average Northern Hemisphere temperatures during the second half of the 20th century were very likely the highest during any 50-year period in the last 500 years, and likely the highest in the past 1300 years,” the report said.

Global warming is expected to result in more extreme weather because of changes in atmospheric wind patterns and the ability of warmer air to hold more moisture, said Martin Manning, the head of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s working group on the physical science of climate change. He said that one year of heavier than normal rains and warmer than usual temperatures said nothing definitive about climate change, but they were consistent with the panel’s long-term predictions.

“What we have projected is an increase in extreme events as the global temperatures rise,” Dr Manning said. “Floods, droughts and heatwaves are certainly consistent with that.”

The World Meteorological Organisation reported the extreme weather occurred in many parts of the world. In May, a series of large waves (estimated at up to 3.6 metres) swamped almost 70 islands in 16 atolls in the Maldive Islands off south India, causing serious flooding and extensive damage. Halfway around the globe, Uruguay was hit during the same month by the worst flooding since 1959 - floods that affected more than 110,000 people and severely damaged crops and buildings. Two months later, an unusual winter brought high winds, blizzards and rare snowfall to parts of South America.

Meanwhile, two extreme heatwaves affected south-eastern Europe in June and July. Dozens of people died, and firefighters worked nonstop battling blazes that destroyed thousands of hectares. On July 23, temperatures hit the record 45 degrees in Bulgaria.

Copyright © 2007. The Sydney Morning Herald.
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Postby Scooter » Thu Aug 09, 2007 11:13 am

Earth has always been subject to climate and weather extremes. One need not search extensively to find evidence. This is one reason I'm skeptical about global warming. If it is happening, I don't necessarily believe humans are causing it.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/climatechange/story/0,12374,873273,00.html

How weather brought down Mayan empire


Robin McKie, science editor
Sunday January 12, 2003
The Observer


Climate change is inevitable, unpredictable, and has been responsible for bringing down some of the world's greatest civilisations. Soon it may do the same to ours.
That is the conclusion of researchers who have found that the Mayans - whose empire reached its peak around 700AD - were destroyed because central America was afflicted by a 200-year drought.

The discovery has been made by the American archaeologist Richardson Gill, who argues that the Mayans - famed for their massive stepped pyramids and astronomy - simply starved to death when their water supplies ran dry, a fate that has profound implications for the future of humanity.


Article continues

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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Gill's research, based on studies of ice cores taken from glaciers in the Andes, is controversial. Many historians believe only cultural changes such as war, trade or rebellion affect the course of history and that people can always adapt to climate change. In the case of the Mayans, it is generally assumed they were destroyed by invaders.
Gill's work challenges this. 'I have seen with my own eyes the devastating effects of drought,' he says in Scientific American. Deprived of water, the Mayans could no longer grow crops and perished.

Gill and his contemporaries argue that humanity is much more vulnerable to weather changes than realised. Studies of tree rings and ice cores taken from glaciers have created a detailed pattern of climate fluctuations going back a thousand years. When matched against historical events, these have revealed startling correspondences.

The Vikings colonised Iceland, Greenland and North America at a time when Europe was enjoying warm weather. Then, around AD1300, the weather worsened and the Little Ice Age began, gripping the world until around 1880. Its worst periods coincided with the Irish potato famine, the destruction of the Spanish Armada, and the French Revolution, while the Viking settlements in America and Greenland were wiped out.

'The weather of 1788 didn't start the French Revolution,' historian Brian Fagan says, 'but the shortage of grain and bread contributed in large measure to its timing.' Similarly, it wasn't the navy that saved England from the Armada in 1588, it was the lousy weather.

Even small fluctuations have had an impact that still affects us, adds Fagan. For example, in 1816, summer temperatures fell to winter levels. Lord Byron and Percy and Mary Shelley, stuck in Switzerland, had to entertain themselves. Thus Mary Shelley's Frankenstein was born in an atmosphere of dank climatic failure. Similarly, Charles Dickens's experiences of bitter winters influenced his stories, including A Christmas Carol, from which we still derive our snow-decked yuletide imagery.

The new research indicates even cultures in the tropics are vulnerable to climatic disruption.

'The reasons for the collapse of the Mayan civilisation have always been controversial,' bio-geographer Philip Stott says. 'But this indicates that drought was a critical factor, even though the Mayans were based in a part of the world considered to be hot and wet.

'And if the weather killed off the Mayans, what other great tropical civilisations might have suffered? The cause of the demise of Angkor, home of the great Khmer kings of Cambodia, has always puzzled historians. Drought may well have caused their collapse.'

If the world has been so vulnerable in the past, it is certainly at risk in future. With the world's population heading towards nine billion, and global temperatures rising, the danger is increasing.

'More than 200 million people now live in marginal lands - round the Sahara and in Bangladesh, for example,' Fagan adds. 'Another major fluctuation and the death toll could dwarf anything that has affected humanity before.'

Stott says: 'The fluctuations indicate the cold periods are the calamitous ones - which suggests all our fears about global warming may be misplaced.'
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Postby gailkaitschuck » Thu Aug 09, 2007 11:37 am

Rather than getting into another long winded discussion on whether Global Warming really exists (I suppose the polar ice caps have to actually melt down to nothing to convince some folks), let's just say it's HOT.

100+ degrees here right now.

The focus this week seems to involve racing to air conditioned work, running home and hiding out in the bedroom where the window unit is working pretty much all the time.

A co-worker commented that we really do have it easy (and I agree with her). I can't imagine working in a job where you have to be out in this heat.

We've had several elderly patients admitted for dehydration and a similar number being treated in our ER.

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Postby Steve_Cox » Thu Aug 09, 2007 12:46 pm

Heat index 113 degrees F here today

The far North and the West coast are looking pretty good right now :thinking:
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Postby apratt » Thu Aug 09, 2007 1:18 pm

Yea It is a compfy 68 degrees right now, I think it suppose to get up to 72 degrees today. Just right. :thumbsup:
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