Following one of its coldest winters in decades, southern Alaska is still experiencing record cold - this time during the summer months.
Anchorage Experiences Coldest First Half of July Ever - (July 15)
"Through the first 14 days of July 2012, the average temperature in Anchorage was 53.1 degrees factoring in daily highs and lows, which makes it the coldest first half of the month on record according to the National Weather Service in Anchorage.
"Some days have even turned out colder than cities on the Arctic Coast such as Barrow. On July 12th, the high temperature topped out at 54 degrees in Anchorage, while temperatures soared to 62 in Barrow (a whooping 15 degrees above average.)"
"Anchorage hasn't been the only southern city feeling the chill. Homer, Alaska is running 5 degrees below normal for the month thus far while Palmer is running 3.8 degrees below average.
"Residents of Anchorage and the southern coast shouldn't expect any big warm ups anytime soon as this pattern of storms moving into the Gulf of Alaska looks to persist."
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This persistent cold pattern in southern Alaska is in complete alignment with the Zetas explanation of Earth wobble dynamics:
"The Earth wobble primarily pushes the Earth's magnetic N Pole away when the Sun is over the Pacific and the N Pole currently off coast of Siberia in the Arctic comes up over the horizon. This great push puts the Pacific under the Arctic air." ZetaTalk
Thus, more of the cold air normally residing over the Arctic Circle is being pushed downward over southern Alaska, where unseasonably cold temperatures are increasingly predominating. The daily Earth wobble also pulls Greenland forward into the Sun, while Alaska receives less overall sunlight which contributes to this cooling effect.
Why else would Greenland suffer unprecedented ice sheet depletion while Alaska experiences record cold? This is hard evidence against the argument for anthropogenic climate change, which is, of course, a Main Establishment Lie.
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2012 Temperatures
PORT HEIDEN, ALASKA - January thru December 2012
HOMER, ALASKA - January thru December 2012
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Rare, Powerful and Unseasonable Windstorms
An unusually strong storm formed off the coast of Alaska on August 5 and tracked into the center of the Arctic Ocean, where it slowly dissipated over the next several days.
There have only been about eight storms of similar strength during the month of August in the last 34 years of satellite records. “It’s an uncommon event, especially because it’s occurring in the summer. Polar lows are more usual in the winter,”
On average, Arctic cyclones last about 40 hours; as of August 9, 2012, this storm had lasted more than five days.
http://explorersweb.com/oceans/news.php?id=20986
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/view.php?id=78808
By mid-September 2012, Anchorage Alaska was pummeled by 2 powerful wind storms within the span of ten days.
http://www.foxnews.com/weather/2012/09/05/wind-storm-knocks-out-pow...
http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/southcentral-alaska-faces-hig...
ZetaTalk Chat Q&A: August 18, 2012
"The Earth wobble is intrinsically connected to a churning atmosphere, and is one of the reasons ZetaTalk was able to go on record early in the ZetaTalk saga with predictions on weather irregularities and tornadoes and hurricanes occurring in atypical places. We knew that the Earth wobble would develop. The Earth wobble centers around the magnetic N Pole, forming a Figure 8. This means that the up/down and side-to-side motion of the wobble engages the Arctic region, daily. Where the complaint is that a normal 40 hour cyclone became a 5 day cyclone, this may in the near future be a minor complaint. It is likely to become a perpetual cyclone, or close to this scenario."
ZetaTalk Chat Q&A: April 6, 2013
"The Figure 8 formed by the N Pole during the daily Earth wobble has shifted somewhat to the East, due to Planet X positioned more to the right of the Earth during its approach. This was anticipated, and well described in ZetaTalk, the Earth crowding to the left in the cup to escape the approach of Planet X, so the angle between these two planets would change slightly. This shift of the Figure 8 to the East is due to the push against the Earth’s magnetic N Pole occurring sooner each day than prior. Thus instead of occurring when the Sun is high over the Pacific, over New Zealand, it is now occurring when the Sun is high over Alaska. All the wobble points have shifted eastward accordingly.
"This has brought a lingering Winter to the western US, and a changed sloshing pattern to the Arctic waters. Instead of Pacific waters being pushed through the Bering Straits into the Arctic when the polar push occurs, the wobble is swinging the Arctic to the right, and then later to the left, creating a circular motion in the waters trapped in the Arctic. Since the Earth rotates counterclockwise, the motion also takes this path. This is yet another piece of evidence that the establishment is hard pressed to explain. They are attempting to ascribe this to high pressure and wind, all of which are not new to the Arctic, but this circular early breakup of ice in the Arctic is new."
ZetaTalk: Heralding (written prior to July 1995)
"Changes have already begun, and are known to your scientists and meteorologists. Violent storms, unusual weather patterns, severe and long lasting droughts, increased frequency of hurricanes, torrential rains, and a general warming of the planet. This is all cast in the category of Global Warming, yet the cause is not certain.
"All attempts to explain the changes based on Global Warming from the Greenhouse effect will run into snags as the weather will refuse to be predictable. Areas of the world which have been deserts throughout mankind's memory will become swamps under constant and repeated rains. Temperate climates used to periodic gentle rainfall will suffer intractable droughts. Then this will switch about, for no apparent reason. The reason lies deep within the Earth's core, an area the meteorologists refuse to consider, and thus their predictions on the atmosphere will never be based on the right parameters.
"A key change, to which one could point, is the warming of the Earth's oceans, around the globe. This has been measured as a 6 inch rise, worldwide, on all the beaches. The waters have risen because they are warmer, and warm water takes up more room than cold water, as all elementary physics books will report. How is it that the oceans, so very deep and so very cold, have warmed up? Is it the almost imperceptible rise in the temperature of the air, a degree or so, as reported to date? Since heat rises, why would this slight rise affect the oceans? Meteorologists will tell you that the effect of air warming is air turbulence, not warmer oceans. The Oceans are warmer because the core of the Earth has heated up, and it does so in response to its brother coming closer. This will continue, and increase, until sometime after the cataclysms are past."
Comment
Record Warmth in Barrow Alaska (August 17) -
http://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/heat-wave-continues-for-...
Temperatures in Barrow typically only climb to 44 degrees this time of year, but have been soaring well above that mark this workweek.
Highs in the 60s graced the city Monday and Tuesday with Monday's high falling one degree short of tying the day's record of 66 degrees from 1991. Highs in the middle to upper 50s then followed for Wednesday and Thursday.
Overnight hours each of these days were also extremely mild, failing to drop out of the upper 40s. Thursday was the third consecutive day that Barrow registered a record warm low temperature.
At 8 a.m. EDT, the temperature in Barrow (54 degrees) was milder than in Minneapolis (51 degrees).
Winds with a persistent southerly component are responsible for Barrow's warm stretch of weather. Such winds prevent any cooling effect from the Arctic.
The opposite occurred last Friday when northwesterly winds ushered in chilly air and held temperatures in Barrow to the freezing mark.
Last Friday's high of 32 degrees was actually the third coldest high temperature recorded on that day (record keeping in Barrow began in 1915) and the lowest daytime high for Barrow since May 28.
Chilly July One of the Coldest in Anchorage History (August 2) -
According to the National Weather Service, the temperature in Alaska's largest city averaged 56.3 degrees for the month. That was only slightly warmer than 1971, the coldest July on record, which averaged 55.4 degrees. Typically, July is the hottest month of the year.
But this July saw just three days of 70 degrees or more, with a high of 73 on July 18. On three other days, the temperature dropped to 45, the coolest for the month.
While Anchorage dealt with chilly weather, the rest of the United States battled a heat wave. Extreme temperatures across the nation have decimated crops.
July’s cold spell is yet another blow for Anchorage residents hoping for respite from a long, hard winter. This winter the city broke the all-time snow record with more than 133 inches. That, mixed with cool summer weather, has left snow in the mountains surrounding Alaska’s largest city.
Alan Czajkowski, director for maintenance and operations with municipality of Anchorage said bulldozers have been going to different snow pile sites around the city to move the snow around in an effort to help it melt faster. He's doubtful the snow will be gone by the end of summer.
Deep mountain snowpack has persisted into midsummer from Anchorage, Alaska to Vancouver BC.
Endless Winter for Alaska's Mountains This Year (Aug 4) -
http://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/endless-winter-for-alask...
There aren't many places you can go to in the United States to see snow in August, and usually, even Anchorage, Alaska, isn't one of them.
But the city is still dealing with leftover snow from last winter in its bordering mountain ranges. The all-time record snowfall of 133.6 inches last winter - just over 11 feet - could give Anchorage an endless winter.
It's a unique milestone set off from the records we've been seeing this summer, with many cities reaching all-time high temperatures when the historic heat wave rolled through in June.
The combination of heavy snowfall and a cool spring caused the lingering snow, said United States Department of Agriculture Snow Survey Supervisor Rick McClure. He said that it's unusual to see snow still remaining in some of the mountains that surround Anchorage.
"Most of the time snow melts in the mountains, unless it's a glacier or snowfield," McClure said. "We've had snow in 4,000-feet elevations that usually melts by early June stay until that time in July. It's very rare to see snow in the mountains that close to the solstice."
May, June and July have all seen colder monthly averages, with July making the cut as the seventh-coldest July in history. There were 24 days in May 19 days in June that fell below the average daily temperature.
Adding the record-shattering snowfall into the mix, it's possible the melt of last year's snow could overlap with new snow falls that can occur as early as September. When this happens, glaciers can form by compressing the old snow into ice, although it would take several years of cold springs like this year's for that cycle to occur, McClure said.
While residents and tourists are taking advantage of the snowcapped scenery, it could create problems for wildlife because the ground hasn't greened, making it difficult for some animals to find food, McClure said.
Hiking in B.C. this summer? Watch out for Snow (July 20) -
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/Hiking+this+summer+Watch+snow/6967...
Summer may have finally reached B.C., but lingering snow on hiking trails in some parks across the province and Western Canada could spell disaster for careless outdoor enthusiasts.
June’s unusually cool weather left some of last winter’s snowpack intact in some high elevations, posing significant risks to hikers who are ill-equipped to handle the icy remnants.
“A hiker told me there’s a metre of snow at Red Heather in Garibaldi Provincial Park,” said Roger Tulsie, a representative at the Squamish Visitor Centre. “Paul Ridge above Red Heather is entirely snow covered. The hiker wasn’t able to reach Elfin Lakes because of it.”
And western Canada’s snowy winter and subsequent late spring likely played big roles in ensuring that conditions at upper elevations remain icebound, said Brian Webster, a visitors safety spokesman at Banff National Park.
Hiking trails above 800 metres remain closed in northern Lynn Headwaters Park (North Vancouver BC) due to 1 metre snowpack (July 28) -
http://www.metrovancouver.org/services/parks_lscr/regionalparks/pag...
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