Exact(13)
But we're getting many more hot records than we're getting cold records.
Daytime heat records in Australia are being broken three times as often as cold records.
There is a clearly measured drop in the odds of setting cold records and rise in the odds of hitting new highs.
We explained this again in our 2011 PNAS paper, and we demonstrate it again in the present Perspective: In a stationary climate you'd get approximately the same amount of hot and cold records.
The warm weather, with daytime high temperatures close to 40 degrees above average in some places (high temperature records are outpacing cold records by a ratio of about 19-to-1 so far this March), set the stage for severe thunderstorms that spawned rare, damaging tornadoes near Detroit.
Weather Underground meteorology director Jeff Masters, who wasn't involved in the study, said in the United States from June to August this year, blistering heat set 2,703 daily high temperature records, compared with only 300 cold records during that period, making it the hottest summer in the US since the Dust Bowl of 1936.
Similar(47)
He begins very much in earnest, at Victoria coach station at 6am every morning for weeks, often hungover, and cold, recording impressions on his smartphone.
Even though cool records can still be set in a warming climate, the report says that since 2001 there are three daytime heat records being broken for every one cold record.
This is a full 10 degrees colder than the U.S. cold record of -79.8 degrees F at Prospect Creek, Alaska on Jan . 23 , 1971
First, there is an immense glut of natural gas in this country, as witnessed by the failure of natural gas to spike in record cold and record heat, as it always did before the shale discoveries.
"What is the coldest recorded temperature that a football match has been played in?" wondered Stephen Robbins last week.
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