|
A Bit of History for
Global Warmers: Look at 1930
By Randy Hall
CNSNews.com Staff Writer/Editor
August 04, 2006
(CNSNews.com) - People sweltering from a heat wave in the Mid-Atlantic
region of the U.S.
might find cold comfort in the fact that the temperatures of the past few days
are not the hottest on record. That "honor" belongs to a summer 76
years ago -- decades before the controversy over "man-made global
warming" began.
"From June 1 to August 31, 1930, 21 days had high temperatures that were
100 degrees or above" in the metropolitan Washington, D.C., area, Patrick
Michaels, senior fellow for environmental studies at the libertarian Cato Institute, told Cybercast
News Service. "That summer has never been approached, and it's not
going to be approached this year."
Between July 19 and Aug. 9 of that year, heat records were set on nine days and they remain unbroken
more than three-quarters of a century later. "That's hot," added
Michaels, who also serves as professor of natural resources at Virginia
Polytechnic Institute and State University in Blacksburg,
Va.
The summer of 1930 also marked the beginning of the longest drought of the 20th
century. In 1934, dry regions stretched from New York
and Pennsylvania across the Great Plains to California. A "dust
bowl" covered about 50 million acres in the south-central plains during
the winter of 1935-1936.
However, the first six months of this year were the hottest across the nation
since the federal government began keeping records in 1890, according to Dennis
Feltgen, a meteorologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration who told NBC News that about 50 all-time high-temperature
records were broken during the month of July.
But Michaels noted that high temperatures are common in the middle of the
summer.
"Climatologically, the last week in July is the warmest week of the year
on average, and when the atmospheric flow patterns get into anomalously warm
configurations during this time of the year, temperatures will skyrocket,"
he said.
Along with an unusual upper-air pattern, the Washington, D.C.,
area "was exceedingly dry" during the summer of 1930, Michaels
stated.
"Generally speaking, when the ground is moist here, temperatures cap out
in the high 90s," he noted. "That's because the sun's energy is
divided into evaporating water and directly heating the surface. If the surface
is dry, then everything goes into heating the surface, and you get exceedingly
hot temperatures like you saw in 1930.
"Big cities are getting warmer -- with or without global warming --
because the bricks and the buildings and the pavement retain heat,"
Michaels added. For that reason, he prefers to compare temperatures in nearby
rural areas. "There's been very little change" in those areas,
"so we trust the record to be a reliable indicator of base climate."
Residents of the nation's capital can look forward to some relief, as weather
forecasts for the weekend call for a cooling trend. "If we were going to
go into the 100s -- the 103 and 104 degree range -- we would have done it, but
there's just a little bit too much moisture in the surface to allow that to
happen," Michaels said. He noted, however, that temperatures are expected
to rise again next week.
The mid-summer temperatures have provided more opportunities for
environmentalists subscribing to the theory that man is responsible for the
current global warming.
Jay Gulledge, senior research fellow for science and impacts at the Pew Center on Global Climate
Change, told NBC News on Wednesday that "this heat wave and other
extreme events we've seen in recent years are completely consistent with what
we expect to become more common as a result of global warming, even though we
can't be definitive on any single event."
Michaels acknowledged that "global temperatures have been warming slightly
for several decades" and noted that the surface of the world "is a
little bit warmer than it was in the 1930s" even though "temperatures
dropped between 1940 and 1975."
"Usually, the way the jet stream breaks out is very hot in the East and
relatively cool in the West or vice versa," he said. "This time
around, it looks more like the summers of the 1930s," but he dismissed the
idea that the extreme temperatures of that time were caused by man-made
"global warming" since "it wasn't around then."
Although the recent heat wave have not convinced Michaels that "global
warming" is a severe problem, it was apparently enough to make a
"convert" out of conservative Christian broadcaster Pat Robertson.
"We really need to address the burning of fossil fuels," Robertson
said during his "700 Club" broadcast on Thursday. The high
temperatures in some regions of the U.S. East are "the most convincing
evidence I've seen on global warming in a long time," he added.
Home
|