State of the Climate of the Central Great Plains

Extreme weather in much of the U.S. this summer had focused attention on climate change. The Central Great Plains region bridges two of the U.S. climate regions as defined by the National Climatic Data Center, West North Central and South. In both regions the long term trend is towards greater annua...

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Main Author: Feddema, Johannes
Format: Still Image
Language:English
Published: Kansas State University 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/14906
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spelling ftkansassu:oai:krex.k-state.edu:2097/14906 2023-05-15T18:18:24+02:00 State of the Climate of the Central Great Plains Feddema, Johannes 2012 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2097/14906 en_US eng Kansas State University http://hdl.handle.net/2097/14906 Climate change Temperature anomalies Great Plains Climatology Poster 2012 ftkansassu 2022-03-05T18:31:11Z Extreme weather in much of the U.S. this summer had focused attention on climate change. The Central Great Plains region bridges two of the U.S. climate regions as defined by the National Climatic Data Center, West North Central and South. In both regions the long term trend is towards greater annual precipitation and higher temperatures although these trends vary by season between the two regions. Temperatures have also been rising around the globe with the majority of temperature anomalies being increases from previous averages. Within the U.S. the impact of climate change has been masked by a “warming hole” encompassing much of the nation. The extensive use of irrigation in much of the Great Plains has resulted in cooler maximum and minimum temperatures over much of the region. On a global scale, warmer temperatures are evidenced by a reduction in the area, thickness, and volume of Artic sea ice. Recent changes in the USDA hardiness zone map as well as phonological indicators point towards a general warming trend. Still Image Sea ice Kansas State University: K-State Research Exchange (K-REx)
institution Open Polar
collection Kansas State University: K-State Research Exchange (K-REx)
op_collection_id ftkansassu
language English
topic Climate change
Temperature anomalies
Great Plains
Climatology
spellingShingle Climate change
Temperature anomalies
Great Plains
Climatology
Feddema, Johannes
State of the Climate of the Central Great Plains
topic_facet Climate change
Temperature anomalies
Great Plains
Climatology
description Extreme weather in much of the U.S. this summer had focused attention on climate change. The Central Great Plains region bridges two of the U.S. climate regions as defined by the National Climatic Data Center, West North Central and South. In both regions the long term trend is towards greater annual precipitation and higher temperatures although these trends vary by season between the two regions. Temperatures have also been rising around the globe with the majority of temperature anomalies being increases from previous averages. Within the U.S. the impact of climate change has been masked by a “warming hole” encompassing much of the nation. The extensive use of irrigation in much of the Great Plains has resulted in cooler maximum and minimum temperatures over much of the region. On a global scale, warmer temperatures are evidenced by a reduction in the area, thickness, and volume of Artic sea ice. Recent changes in the USDA hardiness zone map as well as phonological indicators point towards a general warming trend.
format Still Image
author Feddema, Johannes
author_facet Feddema, Johannes
author_sort Feddema, Johannes
title State of the Climate of the Central Great Plains
title_short State of the Climate of the Central Great Plains
title_full State of the Climate of the Central Great Plains
title_fullStr State of the Climate of the Central Great Plains
title_full_unstemmed State of the Climate of the Central Great Plains
title_sort state of the climate of the central great plains
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/14906
genre Sea ice
genre_facet Sea ice
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2097/14906
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