Nothing to do with climate change, I suppose.
Greenland breaks June heat record
Highest
temperature ever measured in June was registered this year
26
January, 2013
This
summer, it makes a little more sense that the home of the world’s
second-biggest ice sheet is named ‘Greenland’.
The
island just broke its record for the ‘hottest’ day ever measured
in June, Jyllands-Posten reports.
According
to national weather institute DMI, the highest temperature was
registered on June 15 in the southwestern town Kangerlussuaq, where
it reached 23.2 degrees Celsius. That is 0.1 degrees warmer than the
previous record of 23.1 that was measured on two occasions in 1988
and 2002.
Hot
town
“It’s
always warm in Kangerlussuaq in the summer, but there was plenty of
hot air above the whole of Greenland during that period. Then it’s
normal that Kangerlussuaq will get high temperatures,” explained
Frank Nielsen of DMI in Greenland.
It’s
hot air from Newfoundland and Canada that has cranked up the heat in
the Arctic.
“It
tends to get warmer – also in Greenland, where the ice is also
melting. So there might be some high temperatures in the future,”
he told Jyllands-Posten.
Highest
and lowest
Kangerlussuaq
residents have seen some extreme weather through the years.
Its
highest ever temperature, 25.5 degrees, was measured in July 1990,
while its lowest was in January 1989, when it dropped down to a
bone-chilling 52.1 below zero.
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