NOAA: Global temperatures 8th warmest on record for October
Strengthened La Niña conditions expected through winter
November 15, 2011
Global surface temperature Anomalies - October 2011.
High Resolution (Credit: NOAA)
The globe experienced its eighth warmest October since record keeping
began in 1880. Arctic sea ice extent was the second smallest extent on
record for October at 23.5 percent below average. Additionally, La Niña
conditions strengthened during October 2011. According to NOAA’s Climate
Prediction Center, La Niña is expected to continue through the Northern
Hemisphere winter.
This monthly analysis from NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center is
part of the suite of climate services NOAA provides government, business
and community leaders so they can make informed decisions.
Global temperature highlights: October
- The combined global land and ocean average surface temperature
for October 2011 was the eighth warmest on record at 58.14 F (14.58
C), which is 1.04 F (0.58 C) above the 20th century average of 57.1
F (14.0 C). The margin of error associated with this temperature is
+/- 0.13 F (0.07 C).
- The global land surface temperature was 1.98 F (1.10 C) above
the 20th century average of 48.7 F (9.3 C), making this the 2nd
warmest October on record. The margin of error is +/- 0.20 F (0.11
C). Warmer-than-average conditions occurred across Alaska, Canada,
most of Europe and Russia, and Mongolia. Cooler-than-average regions
included the southeastern United States, most of southern and
western South America, parts of Algeria and Libya, part of Eastern
Europe, and far southeast Asia.
- The global ocean surface temperature was 0.70 F (0.39 C) above
the 20th century average of 60.6 F (15.9 C), making it the 11th
warmest October on record. The margin of error is +/- 0.07 F (0.04
C). The warmth was most pronounced across the north central and
northwest Pacific, the northeast Atlantic, and portions of the
mid-latitude Southern oceans.
- The United Kingdom marked its warmest October since 2006 and
eighth warmest in the last 100 years, at 3.6 F (2.0 C) above the
1971–2000 average.
- Several locations in Argentina experienced their coolest October
in five decades.
Global temperature highlights: Year to date
- The combined global land and ocean average surface temperature
for the January – October period was 0.95 F (0.53 C) above the 20th
century average of 57.4 F (14.0 C), making it the 10th warmest such
period on record. The margin of error is +/- 0.16 F (0.09 C).
- The January – October worldwide land surface temperature was
1.53 F (0.85 C) above the 20th century average, the sixth warmest
such period on record. The margin of error is +/- 0.34 F (0.19 C).
The global ocean surface temperature for the year to date was 0.74 F
(0.41 C) above the 20th century average and was the 12th warmest
such period on record. The margin of error is +/-0.07 F (0.04 C).
- La Niña conditions strengthened during October 2011. According
to NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center, La Niña is expected to continue
through the Northern Hemisphere winter 2011/2012.
- Monthly rainfall across Spain was 35 percent below average, the
driest October since 1998.
Polar Sea Ice and Precipitation Highlights
- The average Arctic sea ice extent during October was 23.5
percent below average, ranking as the second smallest October extent
since satellite records began in 1979. The extent was 846,000 square
miles (2.19 million square kilometers) below average and 127,000
square miles (330,000 square kilometers) larger than the record low
October extent set in 2007.
- On the opposite pole, the October Antarctic monthly average ice
extent was 1.2 percent above the 1979–2000 average, the 12th largest
on record.
- Despite a record-breaking snowstorm in the US Northeast,
Northern Hemisphere snow cover extent during October was below
average, and ranked as the 15th smallest October snow cover extent
in the 44-year period of record. The North America and Eurasian land
areas both had below-average snow cover during the month.
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* Included in this report: NOAA is now making it easier to find
information about margins of error associated with its global
temperature calculations. NCDC previously displayed this information in
certain graphics associated with the report, but it will now publish
these ranges in the form of “plus or minus” values associated with each
monthly temperature calculation. These values are calculated using
techniques published in peer-reviewed scientific literature.
More
information.
* In November, the GHCN-M version 3.1.0 dataset of monthly mean
temperature replaced the GHCN-M version 3.0.0 monthly mean temperature
dataset. Beginning with the October 2011 Global Monthly State of the
Climate Report, GHCN-M version 3.1.0 is used for NCDC climate monitoring
activities, including calculation of global land surface temperature
anomalies and trends. More information on this transition can be found
at:
ftp://ftp.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/data/ghcn/v3/techreports/
http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov
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