Re: The One and Only Climate Change thread...
You are correct; a single event is "weather" and not "climate". Included in "weather" is the record daily high temperatures seen in many US cities over the last several weeks. Ditto with the record high in Moscow, and the record high "daily lows" obtained in many places around the world (i.e. smaller daily or diurnal temperature variation). Also with the massive rainfall events seen lately; including the flooding of Nashville a month ago; the collapse of a dam near Cedar Rapids, Iowa on the weekend after 10 inches of rain in one day, and rainfall recently in Chicago and other places reaching almost a foot within a day or so. Also, there have been record low temperatures in the Southern Hemisphere winter in places like Argentina.
All the above is weather. However, the bigger picture (climate) seems to indicate that there are more extremes in highs/lows/rainfall events/etc. occurring around the globe. Climate is really the big picture, whether it be over time (trends over time), or over the globe (i.e spatial trends at one given time). Records being broken in a few locations is one thing, but when there are strong patterns around the world (over and over again in time) that is quite another thing (climate).
Hope that this helps.
You are correct; a single event is "weather" and not "climate". Included in "weather" is the record daily high temperatures seen in many US cities over the last several weeks. Ditto with the record high in Moscow, and the record high "daily lows" obtained in many places around the world (i.e. smaller daily or diurnal temperature variation). Also with the massive rainfall events seen lately; including the flooding of Nashville a month ago; the collapse of a dam near Cedar Rapids, Iowa on the weekend after 10 inches of rain in one day, and rainfall recently in Chicago and other places reaching almost a foot within a day or so. Also, there have been record low temperatures in the Southern Hemisphere winter in places like Argentina.
All the above is weather. However, the bigger picture (climate) seems to indicate that there are more extremes in highs/lows/rainfall events/etc. occurring around the globe. Climate is really the big picture, whether it be over time (trends over time), or over the globe (i.e spatial trends at one given time). Records being broken in a few locations is one thing, but when there are strong patterns around the world (over and over again in time) that is quite another thing (climate).
Hope that this helps.
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