Courtesy of USA Today:
If you want to escape the cold, should you head to ... Alaska?
While most of the lower 48 states continue to endure a hideous deep freeze, Alaska has had an unusually warm start to winter.
In fact, several locations in northern and central Alaska — such as Utqiaġvik (Barrow), Bettles, Kotzebue and McGrath — all had their warmest December on record, according to climatologist Brian Brettschneider. Fairbanks had its 2nd-warmest December. Over the first three weeks of the month, the city was a whopping 20 degrees above average.
And midday Tuesday, at 48 degrees, Anchorage's Merrill Field Airport was warmer than almost the entire Lower 48 states, including cities such as Jacksonville, Houston, Atlanta and New Orleans.
Anchorage had its fifth-warmest December: an average temperature more than 7 degrees above average.
Alaska wasn't just warm in December: Utqiaġvik (Barrow) had its second-warmest year on record. In fact, the tiny city on the state's north coast warmed so fast in 2017, the weather data from the city were automatically flagged as unreal and removed from the climate database, the Capital Weather Gang said.
The weather up here is warming so rapidly that the permafrost is melting and whole towns are in danger of collapsing.
In Anchorage, where I live, I have only had to shovel my driveway about four times this winter and honestly the snow was so minimal that I probably could have skipped one of those.
Typically I would have shoveled more than a dozen times by now, and have snowdrifts five feet high along my driveway.
The other day somebody asked me if this was how winters usually are up here, and I replied with "They are now."
I don't know what this means long term, but we could see a say when people flock to Alaska to escape the freezing temperatures in the lower 48.
Won't that be a kick in the ass?
Source http://ift.tt/2EcIBMU
If you want to escape the cold, should you head to ... Alaska?
While most of the lower 48 states continue to endure a hideous deep freeze, Alaska has had an unusually warm start to winter.
In fact, several locations in northern and central Alaska — such as Utqiaġvik (Barrow), Bettles, Kotzebue and McGrath — all had their warmest December on record, according to climatologist Brian Brettschneider. Fairbanks had its 2nd-warmest December. Over the first three weeks of the month, the city was a whopping 20 degrees above average.
And midday Tuesday, at 48 degrees, Anchorage's Merrill Field Airport was warmer than almost the entire Lower 48 states, including cities such as Jacksonville, Houston, Atlanta and New Orleans.
Anchorage had its fifth-warmest December: an average temperature more than 7 degrees above average.
Alaska wasn't just warm in December: Utqiaġvik (Barrow) had its second-warmest year on record. In fact, the tiny city on the state's north coast warmed so fast in 2017, the weather data from the city were automatically flagged as unreal and removed from the climate database, the Capital Weather Gang said.
The weather up here is warming so rapidly that the permafrost is melting and whole towns are in danger of collapsing.
In Anchorage, where I live, I have only had to shovel my driveway about four times this winter and honestly the snow was so minimal that I probably could have skipped one of those.
Typically I would have shoveled more than a dozen times by now, and have snowdrifts five feet high along my driveway.
The other day somebody asked me if this was how winters usually are up here, and I replied with "They are now."
I don't know what this means long term, but we could see a say when people flock to Alaska to escape the freezing temperatures in the lower 48.
Won't that be a kick in the ass?
Source http://ift.tt/2EcIBMU