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no snow in continental Europe.

2007-01-05 03:06:07 · 4 answers · asked by gauss 1 in Environment

4 answers

This is also an "El Nino" year. El Nino is a large mass of warm water that occurs every 2-7 yrs in the Pacific Ocean. It has been linked to odd weather patterns. BTW, global warming is cyclic.

2007-01-05 03:15:11 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No. Nova Scotia has been hit with the tail ends of hurricanes perpetually. Or hurricanes themselves. They very generally song up the east coast of the U. S. and into Canada. yet by technique of the time they attain Canada the water is often too cool for them to be something better than a Cat a million hurricane or generally purely a tropical hurricane. After passing NS they fizzle out very rapidly because of the cooler waters and grow to be not something better than rainstorms. lower back interior the Nineteen Fifties (or early Nineteen Sixties in line with risk) hurricane Hazel hit Ontario (particularly Toronto...an excellent distance from the sea) as a Cat 2 and did an excellent variety of harm. that is unusual yet not unparalleled.

2016-12-15 16:21:19 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

No -- it's a seasonal variation due mostly to El Nino ... This year it's 50 here; last year it was 2 F..... That is way too big for the 1 degree C that has been attributed to global warming.

2007-01-05 03:17:23 · answer #3 · answered by Gene 7 · 0 0

YES, I live in Wisconsin, and it snowed once this year. Yesterday it rained. Usually it gets below zero at least once in the last ten years this has happened less and less. The one time it did snow it was a foot deep, another sign of global warming. or it could be a scare tactic from politicians to scare you into voting for them?

2007-01-05 04:49:15 · answer #4 · answered by they call me gabe 1 · 0 0

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