on 14-07-2014 04:43 PM
Not since July 28 1911 has Brisbane felt this cold, getting down to a brisk 2.6C at 6.41am.At 7am, it inched up to 3.3C.
Matt Bass, meteorologist from BOM, said the region was well below our average temperatures.“If it felt cold, that’s because it was,
breaking that record is pretty phenomenal for Brisbane,” Bass said.“The average for this time of year is 12C, so Brisbane was about 9C
below average, it is pretty impressive really, to have the coldest morning in 103 years is a big record.”The coldest place across the
state was Oakey which got down to -6.1C, which was the coldest temperature for the town since 2011.
15-07-2014 12:03 PM - edited 15-07-2014 12:04 PM
@siggie-reported-by-alarmists wrote:That reminds me of Vivaldi.....
yeah me too
♪Beneath the blazing sun's relentless heat
men and flocks are sweltering,
pines are scorched.♪
Might go and put it on the music thread lol
on 15-07-2014 03:06 PM
it's called 'winter', debra9275.
I wouldn't worry too much
15-07-2014 04:31 PM - edited 15-07-2014 04:34 PM
Someone dosen't understand my Vivaldi post.....lol.
on 15-07-2014 04:45 PM
@siggie-reported-by-alarmists wrote:Someone dosen't understand my Vivaldi post.....lol.
does it matter?
on 15-07-2014 04:47 PM
Giggle........
on 15-07-2014 09:29 PM
Vivaldi's Le quattro stagioni is a perfect analogy for variable short term seasonal temperature variations, whereas understanding of long term trends is best achieved using historical records for the country such as those from our own BOM:
nɥºɾ
on 16-07-2014 06:48 AM
I wonder where the graph will be in another 10 to twenty years........gotta love cycles........
on 16-07-2014 08:24 AM
Now this is long term......lol.
on 16-07-2014 08:30 AM
Or this.......
on 17-07-2014 10:44 AM
I see the term trend, slope, period, location, (science even) are still proving difficult concepts to grasp.
So as I am not living in Greenland, or will live for a 100,000 years, (LOL) I will indicate that since the Industrial Revolution global temperatures have increased at over 2 orders of magnitude faster than those ever recorded/measured, and surprise! , mirror the likewise rapid increase and accelerating atmospheric CO2 density, also with trends far greater than ever in our ancient history.
Mankind the destroyer.
nɥºɾ