I
irishpatrick
Guest
*The National Climatic Data Center announced Thursday what most Americans had been feeling all summer: It’s been a scorcher across the country, the second-hottest since 1895.But there are those who claimed 1936 was the hottest recorded temp.
I provided the link to show that wasn’t the case.
Jim
But not by much. The warmest national average for June, July and August was 74.6 in 1936. This summer’s average was 74.5.
The temperature average has to be considered in context. Some regions experienced unseasonably cool weather, and California and New Jersey had their wettest summers ever.*
latimesblogs.latimes.com/greenspace/2011/09/second-hottest-summer-record-drought.html
That was reported by the National Climate Data Center–so, who is correct?
Either way we have had many really hot summers, and many of them came long before 2012! So, explain how in 1895 we had such a hot summer without cars and factories polluting the air, and with a world population about 25% of today’s total?
I would be willing to guess that if we had data about solar activity during all those hot summers, we’d find a simple correlation to sun activity with the hotter summers. The real engine of the earth’s weather are the oceans, with the sun imputing the real change in those enormous water bodies–there is nothing we can do about the sun or the oceans, no matter how much we spend.
Now, before you feel compelled to post data from another site, can we at least agree that there have been many really hot summers, and that a tenth of a degree difference between now and 1895 is a statistically and scientifically unimportant number? One would think that if manmade global warming caused our current hot summer, that we would see a sharp difference between temps today, versus those of 100 years ago–but in truth, we see no real difference at all between the really hot years of the 1930s, 1895, and now.