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Have you looked at the North Pole lately?

arsekick

Well-known member
Ya fucking thick cunt scientists are not the government! 🤣
I see your trying to change your approach to your garbage delivery. First you tried the I know more and put up loads of discredited garbage approach. Now your trying the government is nothing but liars and we're the idiots for believing the government approach! 🤣
10 points for trying something different dumb dumb but the science is just irrefutable!! 🤪
Can you name any real scientists pushing the warming bullshit ?
I've not heard one non TV scientist pushing the garbage, but can name plenty that deny Co2 is the temperature control knob of the planet, have put plenty of shit up from world renowned scientists and all you do is cry "big oil" funds them to lie, or they are not climate scientists so what would they know, when that fails you resort to childish abuse.

Who are the main cunts pushing the man made warming theory to the people, the fucking governments and the left as fuck UN, no evidence needed they just keep parroting the same bullshit over and over


Yes the Governments are lying scum and you're a fool to believe them

No doubt you think this cunt below has the IQ of a rocket scientist, when he's probably got the same 82 IQ as you ya DC :ROFLMAO: if he's lucky


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igrowone

Well-known member
Veteran

November 2023​

The November global surface temperature was 1.44°C (2.59°F) above the 20th-century average of 12.9°C (55.2°F), making it the warmest November on record. This was 0.38°C (0.68°F) above the previous record from November 2015. November 2023 marked the 47th-consecutive November and the 537th-consecutive month with temperatures at least nominally above the 20th-century average.


November saw a record-high monthly global ocean surface temperature for the eighth consecutive month. El Niño conditions that emerged in June continued into November, and according to NOAA's Climate Prediction Center there is a 60% chance that El Niño will continue through April–June 2024.

The Northern Hemisphere had its warmest November on record at 2.07°C (3.73°F) above average. Both land and ocean temperatures were at record-highs for the Northern Hemisphere this November. The Arctic region had its second-warmest November on record.

November 2023 in the Southern Hemisphere also ranked warmest on record at 0.81°C (1.46°F) above average. While the average ocean-only temperature for November in the Southern Hemisphere ranked highest on record this November, the land-only temperature tied 2016 for the eighth highest on record. Meanwhile, the Antarctic region tied 1959 for its sixth-coolest November.

November 2023 Blended Land and Sea Surface Temperature Anomalies in degrees Celsius
November 2023 Blended Land and Sea Surface Temperature Anomalies in degrees Celsius

November 2023 Blended Land and Sea Surface Temperature Percentiles
November 2023 Blended Land and Sea Surface Temperature Percentiles

A smoothed map of blended land and sea surface temperature anomalies is also available.

Temperatures were above average throughout most of South America, northern, western, and central North America, Africa, western and southern Europe, western, central, and southern Asia, Oceania, and the Arctic. Parts of northern North America, northern and central South America, Africa, and eastern and southern Asia experienced record-warm temperatures this month. Sea surface temperatures were above average across much of the northern and western Pacific as well as the central and southern Atlantic and the western Indian Oceans. Record-warm temperatures covered nearly 13% of the world's surface this November, which was the highest percentage for November since the start of records in 1951.

Temperatures were near to cooler than average across much of Antarctica as well as across parts of eastern North America, northern Europe, southern South America, and central-eastern Asia. Sea surface temperatures were near to below average over parts of the southeastern Pacific Ocean, the eastern Indian Ocean, and the northern Atlantic Ocean. Less than 1% of the world's surface had a record-cold November.

South America, Africa, and Asia each had their warmest November on record.

  • November in Brazil was warm, with twelve consecutive days of above-average temperatures and a record-high 44.8°C (112.6°F) reached on November 19 in the municipality of Araçuaí.
  • Hong Kong had its second-warmest November on record.
  • November in Pakistan ranked eighth warmest on record.
November 2023 ranked second warmest on record for North America and fifth warmest for Oceania.

  • The contiguous U.S. had its 19th-warmest November in the 129-year record.
  • The Caribbean Islands region had its warmest November on record.
  • November in Cuba ranked third warmest since records began in 1951.
  • New Zealand had a November temperature that was 0.4°C above its 1991–2020 average, ranking as the 34th-warmest November since records began in 1909.
  • November in Australia ranked ninth-warmest on record.
Europe tied 2003 for its 15th-warmest November on record.

  • Italy recorded its eighth-warmest November on record.
  • The United Kingdom reported a near-average temperature for November, just 0.1°C below average.
  • Norway had its coldest November since 2010.
  • November in Estonia was 0.7°C below the long-term average.
  • Latvia recorded a November temperature that was 0.5°C below the monthly norm.
 
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