Last
month the warmest
January recorded on Earth,
US agency says
14
February, 2020
Last
month was the warmest January recorded on Earth, by a whisker, the US
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) says.
Record-warm
temperatures were seen across parts of: Scandinavia, Asia, the Indian
Ocean, the central and western Pacific Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean, and
Central and South America.
Things
weren't so unusual in New Zealand, with Niwa reporting earlier
that the nationwide average temperature for the month - as measured
through its seven station series - was 17.2 degrees Celsius. That was
just 0.1C above the 1981-2010 January average.The
Antarctic's highest ever temperature was recorded in January.
The
New Zealand average temperature was held down by a cooler than usual
first half of the month, as the wind came from the southerly quarter.
Temperatures were well above average in the second half of the month.
According
to NOAA, the January global land and ocean surface temperature was
the highest on record at 1.14C above the 20th-century average. That
was 0.02C higher than the previous record in January 2016.
The
four warmest January months on record all happened since 2016,
with all of the 10 warmest since 2002, NOAA said.
The
Northern Hemisphere also had its warmest January on record, at 1.5C
above average. The Southern Hemisphere was 0.78C above average - its
second-warmest January on record after January 2016.
In
February, some remarkable temperatures have been recorded from around
the tip of the Antarctic Peninsula, which stretches out from
Antarctica, pointing north to South America.
Brazilian scientists
recorded 20.75C at Seymour Island,
the highest temperature ever recorded in the Antarctic. At
Argentina's Esperanza Base the temperature reached 18.3C, which
was a record for mainland Antarctica.
Punta
del Este on Uruguay's Atlantic Coast in January. South America had
its second warmest January on record last month.
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