Above – Hilarious and weirdly sexy folk-rock version of Nelly’s “Hot in Here”.
Below, hottest 12 months on record.
Americans just lived through the hottest 12 months ever recorded, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported Tuesday.
The announcement came as NOAA reported that the U.S. also just experienced its third-warmest April on record.
“These temperatures, when added with the first quarter and previous
11 months, calculate to the warmest year-to-date and 12-month periods
since recordkeeping began in 1895,” the agency reported.
NOAA said that for the period from May 2011 to April 2012, the
nationally averaged temperature was 55.7 degrees, 2.8 degrees higher
than the 20th century average. The national average temperature for
April was 55 degrees, 3.6 degrees above average.
To be sure, the higher temperatures haven’t hit every region equally.
The Pacific Northwest actually saw cooler-than-average temperatures
over the past year, according to NOAA data. Much of California was also cooler than normal; Southern California had an average year.
But record averages for the year scorched central Texas — which saw a
horrific drought last year — the upper Midwest, and much of the
Northeast.
Temperatures that would have once been considered
unusually hot and record breaking now aren’t even in the top two or
three, said Michael Oppenheimer, a Princeton University climate
scientist.
The last time the globe had a month that averaged below the 20th
Century normal was February 1985. April makes it 326 months in a row.
Nearly half the population of the world has never seen a month that was
cooler than normal, according to United Nations data.
“A warmer world is the new normal,” Oppenheimer said. “To me, it’s
startling to think that a generation has grown up with global warming
defining their
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