Snow In Both Hemispheres; Arctic Sea Ice Going Nowhere; + Hockey Sticks And Fairy Tales
The 'hockey stick' graph as a product of poor data handling, methodological flaws, and misleading statistical practices.
Snow In Both Hemispheres
As the Southern Hemisphere's ski season winds down, its Northern cousin's is commencing in impressive fashion.
Starting in the south, Australia’s season was thought to be over, with Perisher, its largest resort, closing earlier than planned after the remaining snow melted. But a surprise spring freeze is blowing in this week, one forecast to dump late-Sept/early-Oct snow on Tasmania and also across the peaks of Victoria and New South Wales.
New Zealand’s resorts are holding on, battling fluctuating temperatures that are creating classic freeze-thaw conditions. Mt Hutt maintains the country’s deepest snowpack, while Cardrona and Coronet Peak are managing to keep 90+% of their terrain open.
Snow in 'Australia & NZ' is still holding strong, following mid-September's record-setting peak:
Headed to South America, the likes of Chile and Argentina are also experiencing some final dumps, capping off what has been one of the best snow seasons in living memory.
Valle Nevado in Chile extended operations into late October thanks to consistent heavy snows throughout the year. While Argentina’s Chapelco, currently boasting the world’s deepest snowpack, is holding on.
While in Southern Africa, the late-season snows have proved historic (and deadly), with yet more forecast this weekend.
Switching to the Northern Hemisphere, winter is arriving in spectacular fashion, especially in the European Alps, where a record-breaking 2.5 meters (8.2 feet) of September snow has prompted early openings at many resorts, particularly on Austrian glaciers.
Anticipation is also high for North America’s season, where early mountain snowfall has been healthy and widespread — such as on Colorado’s Crested Butte which logged half a foot up top yesterday (Sept 25):
Arctic Sea Ice Going Nowhere
"If the hottest year ever can’t precipitate ‘ice-free’ conditions in September, what’s it going to take?" asks zoologist Dr Susan Crockford.
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