miércoles, 21 de julio de 2010

Earth Heat beat his record in June



The month of June was the warmest in history since 1880 when records began climate data. The average temperature from April to June has set a new record, according to measurements carried out by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), USA.

Specifically, the average temperature in June stood at 16.2 degrees Celsius. The half of the twentieth century was 15.5 °, ie, 0.60 ° below the level recorded last month.
Also, the first half of the year was, on average, the second warmest since measurements are made. The first six months of 2007 still holds the record.

The Earth Heat
NOAA notes that in various places on Earth have been recorded at higher temperatures than average over these months, as in Peru, central and eastern U.S. and eastern and western Asia.
June, a cold month in Spain.
However, in other parts of the globe has been lower temperatures than usual. In Spain, the average temperature was the coldest since 1997, according to AEMET.

There were also lower temperatures in Scandinavia, southern China and northwestern United States.
The surface temperature of the oceans in June stood at 0.54 º C above the average of the twentieth century, making this month in the fourth warmest June since 1880 reigstrado. The heat was most intense in the Atlantic.

The American Research Center NOAA published every month that his department analysis of weather makes temperatures recorded on Earth. Their database goes back to 1880.

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