11-12-2014, 12:28 PM
Not so cold on the Island (NE USA), but is full-blown winter weather for the Midwest for at least the next week). The National Weather service has a graph of what this has meant historically for the winter:
http://www.crh.noaa.gov/news/display_cms...1&source=0
I assume the temperatures are in Degrees F., Not C.
The 1976 fall winter were also exceptional in the NE USA: rivers and bays froze over at least as far south is Delaware Bay, and geese were frozen in the ice. Pittsburgh had trouble with natural gas supplies because the rivers froze over.
Again, there was only 1% science in my "prediction" above, but if November continues extremely cold, then the link is "science": 10 colder winters and 6 warmer winters, with the bigger extremes being on the cold side.
Chris
Chris
http://www.crh.noaa.gov/news/display_cms...1&source=0
I assume the temperatures are in Degrees F., Not C.
The 1976 fall winter were also exceptional in the NE USA: rivers and bays froze over at least as far south is Delaware Bay, and geese were frozen in the ice. Pittsburgh had trouble with natural gas supplies because the rivers froze over.
Again, there was only 1% science in my "prediction" above, but if November continues extremely cold, then the link is "science": 10 colder winters and 6 warmer winters, with the bigger extremes being on the cold side.
Chris
Chris