Now Playing
Connect with Us
Podcasts & RSS Feeds
| All Content |
| RSS |
| View all podcasts & RSS feeds | ||
Most Active Stories
- Four Concerts Scheduled In Expanded, Larger Back Porch Music Series In Durham
- Duke Professor Carries On Tradition Of Black Radical Poetry
- First Openly Lesbian Presbyterian Pastor, One Year In
- Why Legislators Are Changing State Environmental Policy
- VIDEO: Colbert Claims To Be A Tar Heel After Sister Loses SC Congressional Race
Hosts, Reporters and Producers
The Two-Way
6:50 pm
Mon September 10, 2012
NOAA: This Summer Was Third Hottest On Record
Originally published on Mon September 10, 2012 6:51 pm
Today in Washington, D.C. we got our first taste of fall. It was crisp and in the low 60s. And just as we slide into the last days of summer in the Northern Hemisphere, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration published its summer 2012 recap.
It's exactly what you were expecting: It was really hot. In fact, 2012 was the third hottest on record.
NOAA reports:
"According to the latest statistics from NOAA's National Climatic Data Center, the average temperature for the contiguous United States between June and August was over 74° Fahrenheit, which is more than 2° F above the twentieth-century average. Only the summers of 2011 and 1936 have had higher summer temperatures for the Lower 48."
This map tells the story. The more red it gets the more it deviated from average temperatures. It shows that parts of Colorado, Wyoming, Kansas and Nebraska saw temperatures up to 8 degrees higher than the 20th Century average.
Summer, by the way, ends Sept. 21.
9(MDAyNTQ1NzQ1MDEyMjk0OTcxNTI4MzljZQ001))
