Friday, March 13, 2020

Finnish Meteorological Institute Reports Northern Hemisphere Snow Mass ‘Highest Levels In Year’



 
 We know that the Northern Hemisphere is warmer.  That the snow pack has been increasing is real physical confirmation.

Recall that warmth produces moisture in the atmosphere and the production of snow releases that warmth.  It does not take much to do all this and it can be subtle.  The snow pack is likely our best real proxy.  So we are still warmer than the previous era.


Again the time span reflects earlier warm spells as well.



Finnish Meteorological Institute Reports Northern Hemisphere Snow Mass ‘Highest Levels In Year’

By: - Climate Depot 

March 10, 2020 1:29 PM

 
Finnish Meteorological Institute Reports Northern Hemisphere Snow Mass “Highest Levels In Year”!
German broadcaster RTL here reported how Northern Hemisphere snow mass has reached the highest level in years.
The Finnish Meteorological Institute (FMI) reports the total amount of snow in the northern hemisphere this winter season has been well above the long-term average from 1982 to 2012.
This will come as a surprise to Europeans, who have seen one of the mildest winters on record. According to RTL, “In those places where it was cold enough for snow at all, there was a lot of snow. The snow is meters high, higher than usual.”
Snow cover trending upwards since 1990
Looking at the northern Hemisphere snow cover charts from Rutgers University Global Snow Lab, northern hemisphere snow cover (area) has been on the rise since reaching a low in 1990.
Record-breaking snow across Montana and South Dakota
Meanwhile weather site Electroverse reports of “record breaking February snowfall” burying Montana and South Dakota. According to Electroverse, “The cold times are returning” due to reversing natural cycles.

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