What happened to winter, and will it ever show up? (Washington Post, 1/10/2020)
Since late December, weather over the eastern United States has at times more closely resembled March or even April. Before a rare, seasonably cold day Thursday in Washington and Boston, the cities saw streaks of 17 and 19 consecutive days with higher-than-average temperatures.
Related posts:
January 2020
2019: One for the "impossibly warm" record books in Bethel, Alaska. (1/8/2020)
A decade of record heat in India. (1/8/2020)
UPDATE: Keeping tabs on Australia's record heat (2019-2020 summer edition). (1/7/2020)
December 2019 In Iceland, record-breaking early December heat follows a record-breaking hot summer. (12/6/2019)
November 2019
Key West and Hawaii. (11/18/2019)
August 2019
Alaska: Dead salmon linked to climate change. (8/24/2019)
June 2019
India. (6/17 /2019)
San Francisco. (6/12/2019)
Atlanta, Geogia. (6/5/2019)
April 2019
Australia suffers through record hot March. (4/2/2019)
March 2019
Seattle's record-breaking winter heat. (3/19/2019)
UPDATE: Central Florida's record-setting February heat. (3/2/2019)
January 2019
Australia, scorched. (1/16/2019)
2018: Hottest year ever for Australian state of New South Wales. (1/11/2019)
Sea surface temperatures around New Zealand hottest ever in 2018, further threatening marine life. (1/11/2019)
GET ME REWRITE: Prague experiences hottest year on record for third time this decade. (1/6/2019)
August 2018
Climate change as a matter of fact: Red-hot summer of record heat in Europe. (8/18/2018)
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