The autumn of 2016 was by far the warmest on record in Iceland. The
fall temperatures in Akureyri, in North Iceland, were significantly
higher than any on record, and those in Reykjavík the second highest, the local newspaper reported.
Trausti Jónsson, Iceland‘s most trusted meteorologist, explains the
unusually high temperatures by the prevalence of southerly winds during
the fall, and the unusually warm temperature of northerly winds.
"Freezing temperatures have not accompanies northern winds in the same
degree as usually, which is connected to the unusually low quantity of
sea ice in Arctic waters."
According to the Icelandic Meteorological Office, the average temperature in Reykjavík during November was 3.5°C (°F)
which is 0.9°C ( °F) higher than the average of the past 10 years, and
2.4°C (°F) above the average temperature in 1961-1990, while the heat in
Akureyri was 3°C (°F) which was 3.4°C (°F) and 2.3°C (°F) above the
average of the past 10 years.
http://icelandmag.visir.is/article/another-freak-weather-event-a-heatwave-eiceland-middle-night
No comments:
Post a Comment