What are the implications of cold snaps and wild swings in temperature for the  veracity of climate change? Everyone who follows climate science knows  that the planet is warming,  but many are unaware of how temperature fluctuations may also be a part  of the climate change picture. Scientific observations provide an  overwhelmingly compelling body of evidence for global warming. Many  lines of scientific evidence show that as a consequence of global  warming, the Earth’s climate is changing, however, increasing global  mean temperature is only one element of observed climate change  phenomena.
Evidence of global warming can be seen in a number of scientific  observations including melting ice and sea level rises. Anomalies like  increased precipitation and extreme weather events support the data  generated by climate models. However, radical temperature fluctuations  are another dimension of climate change that is often overlooked.
Both Dallas and Colorado recently experienced some of the most  extreme temperature fluctuations on record. After enjoying balmy  temperatures, Dallas was hit with a powerful cold front that caused  temperatures to plummet below freezing. On Wednesday December 4, the  observed high was 80 degrees, on Saturday December 7, the temperature  plunged to just over 30 degrees. That is a temperature change of 50  degrees. Similarly, Denver went from being 67 degrees on Monday to 14  degrees on Wednesday. This represents a temperature difference of 53  degrees.
During the first week of December, 33 million Americans in 27 states  were hit by a cold spell. Deniers have commonly looked at cold weather  as evidence that disproves global warming. However, when examined over  much longer time spans we see a clear warming trend. Further, high and  low temperature data from recent decades show that new record highs occur nearly twice as often as new record lows.
Of course, individual temperature readings over the course of a few  days cannot be taken as evidence for or against climate change. However,  the anomalous temperature fluctuations are part of a trend that is  consistent with what many scientists predict will occur as the planet  warms.
As H.J. Weaver and his colleagues at the Australian National  University explained, “Climate change is predicted to alter the physical  environment through cumulative impacts of warming and extreme  fluctuations in temperature and precipitation, with cascading effects on  human health and well being, food security and socioeconomic  infrastructure.”
A NOAA report (PDF) on the 2009/2010 Cold Season stated that a changing climate produced “Extreme fluctuations in  temperature and precipitation in the mid-latitudes in 2009 and 2010.”
The winters of 2010 and 2011 in the northern hemisphere have resulted  in the record-setting freezes and warm spells. According to an analysis  of the past 63 winters from the American Geophysical Union, the warm  extremes were more widespread and severe than the cold extremes in the  winters of 2009-2010 and 2010-2011. Natural variability may explain the  cold temperatures, but researchers concluded the extreme warmth cannot  be explained by natural cycles, suggesting a possible role of climate  change. The report’s co-author Alexander Gershunov and Scripps climate  researchers indicated that these temperature swings are consistent with global warming trends.
In Nowata Oklahoma, in the winter of 2011,  the temperature went from  a low of -31 degrees on February 10 (the all-time coldest temperature  ever recorded in Oklahoma) to a record high of 79 degrees on February  17. According to the National Weather Service in Tulsa, Okla., this  110-degree temperature rise is the greatest change within seven days in  Oklahoma history.
A 2011 report out of the UK examined the possible infrastructure impacts of climate change and indicated that extreme temperature fluctuations are likely.
A July 2013 study on plant physiology and climate change talked about “expected extreme fluctuations in temperature and global warming in general.”
It is important to understand as we approach irreversible tipping points that the impacts of climate change may at times appear to be  counterintuitive. Far from disproving global warming, radical  fluctuations in temperature are another dimension of the same problem.
Source: Global Warming is Real
Related Articles
Video - How Global Warming Can Exacerbate Cold Snaps (Jetstream and Rossby Waves)Video - Why Cold Weather Does Not Disprove Global Warming!
Extreme Cold in North America is due to Stratospheric Warming
The Middle East Hit by Anomalous Cold Temperatures and Snow
New Report on Extreme Weather in Australia
Extreme Weather and Global Weirding
                                        Home
                                      
anomalous
bizarre
climate change
climate denial
climate deniers
colder
facts
freezing
Global Warming
global weirding
ice
low temperatures
science
snow
strange
truth
weather
winter
Temperature Fluctuations and Cold Spells are Consistent with Climate Change
- Blogger Comment
 
- Facebook Comment
 
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
                            (
                            Atom
                            )
                          
0 comments:
Post a Comment