Warmest March On Record

The warmest March on record in the US occurred in 1910.  This was followed a few weeks later by Halley’s Comet and the largest forest fire in US history.

Chart IV. Departure of the Mean Temperature from the Normal, March, 1910 in: Monthly Weather Review Volume 38 Issue 3 (1910)

Apr 17, 1910, page 52 – Chicago Tribune at Newspapers.com

“The charred bodies of twenty firefighters were found on Setzer creek, in the St. Joseph country. Two burned Japanese dragged themselves to Avery, Idaho, last night and told of the death of ten of their comrades. The eighteen men, employees of the Milwaukee railroad had gone out to fight the fire and had been surrounded by flames, only two men escaping death.”

Aug 25, 1910, page 1 – The Butte Miner at Newspapers.com

According to Michael Mann, 1910 was right at the bottom after 900 years of cooling.

Climate Change 2001: The Scientific Basis

About Tony Heller

Just having fun
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5 Responses to Warmest March On Record

  1. dm says:

    Does mad Dr. Mann suffer from climate dysphoria or climate schizophrenia?

  2. Denis Rushworth says:

    But you see Tony the March 1910 temps have yet to be homogenized with measured temperatures in Canada’s Northwest Territories. They didn’t have the marvelous technology back then.

  3. Trevor says:

    Reminds me of my trip to Tuktoyaktuk in fall 2019. All summer I heard that the arctic was boiling and melting and on fire with record heat. When we arrived, I was mentioning to the locals that we were surprised about how cool it was in September and they said “Oh No, this is the warmest its been all summer”. Haha. How little they understand about temperatures, I thought.

  4. Ulric Lyons says:

    See the cooler Wolf, Sporer, and Maunder minimums in that reconstruction. The AMO is warmer during centennial lows in solar activity, so the reconstruction series must be heavily biased by land temperatures. The northern hemisphere warms during a warm AMO phase, even though continental temperatures may be cooler.

    https://media.springernature.com/m685/springer-static/image/art%3A10.1038%2Fs41598-017-13246-x/MediaObjects/41598_2017_13246_Fig2_HTML.jpg

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