If we continue to pump CO2 into the atmosphere, temperatures may get as hot as they were when CO2 was much lower. This is because all temperature change since 1750 is man made.
July 29, 1930 ABERDEEN 113 CORINTH 7 SW 111 STATE UNIV 111 GREENVILLE 110 MOORHEAD 110 WATER VALLEY 109 BATESVILLE 2 SW 108 BOONEVILLE 108 CLARKSDALE 108 UNIVERSITY 108 KOSCIUSKO 107 LOUISVILLE 107 HERNANDO 106 FOREST 104 CANTON 4N 103 CRYSTAL SPGS EX 103 PORT GIBSON 1 N 102 BROOKHAVEN CITY 100
Steve here’s some events I’ve found for the period between 1930 – 1939.
12 January 1930,
Atlantic: 23 die when the Royal Navy tug St. Genny sinks in a gale off Ushant.
13 January 1930,
China: Two million are reported to have died of starvation; famine threatens millions more.
20 January 1930,
Philippines: 14 towns are devastated in a typhoon.
3 March 1930,
France: 200 people are feared dead as floods strike the south-west of the country.
11 April 1930,
New York Scientists predict that man will land on the Moon by the year 2050.
11 July 1930,
Chicago: 72 people die in a heat wave.
28 August 1930,
UK: 34 people have died in a heat wave: temperatures in London soar to 94 degrees F (34 degrees C).
13 November 1930,
France: 40 people are killed in a landslide in Lyons.
6 February 1931,
Washington: The Senate agrees to $20 million aid for drought victims in the South and Mid-West.
3 August 1931,
China: Hundreds die when a dam on the River Yangtse Kiang near Hankow bursts during a Typhoon.
17 August 1931,
UK: 14 die as gales and floods hit the country.
November 1931,
China: Central China floods. The human deaths are estimated 257,000–436,000
23 August 1933,
US: Chesapeake Bay Hurricane of 1933-A powerful Cape Verde Storm that reached Category Four strength at one point before weakening to Category Two strength. The storm ended up causing 79 million dollars in damage according to 1969 estimates, and left some 18 people dead. It also knocked out service to about 79,000 telephones as well as uprooted some 600 trees in Virginia Beach. The storm also set a record for storm surge with one that was 9.8 feet above normal in spots.
11 September 1931,
British Honduras: Over 700 deaths are reported when the colony is lashed by 100 mph winds.
28 August 1933,
UK: Drought threatens as the temperature touches 90 degrees F (32 degrees C).
4 September 1933,
UK: Forest fires rage through Dorset and Hampshire following recent dry weather.
10 September 1933,
More fires raged across southern England and Wales; Four Square miles of acres of Epping blazed out of control as fire men, soldiers and Sunday picnickers tried to beat back the flames with branches torn from trees. Near Monmouth Last night 100-feet flames lit up vast areas of burning Crown woodland. Two cars were burnt out in the New Forrest, but, astonishingly, there are no reports of deaths. The fires follow a month-long heat wave, with temperatures of up to 90 degrees F (32 degrees C).
12 September 1933,
UK: Rainfall ends the recent drought and puts out the forest fires.
16 September 1933,
US: Major Hurricane of September, 1933 -1933 was a very active year for tropical storms and hurricanes with 21 named storms, and 10 of them becoming hurricanes. In addition to the Great Chesapeake Hurricane of 1933, the Mid-Atlantic was hit by another hurricane almost exactly a month to the day later when a Category Three storm emerged from a disturbance in the Bahamas, and came up the coast to make landfall at Cape Lookout, North Carolina. The storm ended up causing about a fraction of the damage caused by the Chesapeake Bay storm. Only about 2,000 telephones were knocked out by the storm, and only two people died in Virginia.
25 February 1934,
US: 23 are reported dead after tornadoes sweep through southern states.
7 April 1934,
Norway: 57 are feared dead when a cliff crumbles, plunging two towns into the sea.
2 June 1934,
Washington: $6,000 million aid is voted for farmers in drought-stricken areas.
21 June 1934,
US A heat wave in the Mid-West kills 206 people in three days.
21 September 1934,
Japan: Up to 1,500 people are reported dead after a typhoon strikes the centre of the country.
7 April 1935,
US: Tornadoes kill 26 and injure 150 in the state of Mississippi.
11 April 1935,
The dust storm that swept across the USA’s “Bread Basket” created a staggering trail of destruction. Kansas, Colorado, Wyoming, Okalahoma, Texas and New Mexico were all affected. Increasingly severe dust storms are hanging like a black scourge over half the country, wiping out millions of dollars’ worth of crops, forcing thousands to flee their homes and paralysing all activity in some districts. While humans can protect themselves with masks during a storm, livestock suffer miserably. The incidence of dust pneumonia among children is growing. Little relief is in sight, as dust piles up inside houses; schools and business are closed; traffic is stopped and bereaved families cannot bury their dead. In Texas, even the birds are afraid to fly.
1 July 1935,
Japan: 227 die in floods.
5 August 1935,
Brilliant sunshine lured more Britons to the coast and countryside than on any previous Bank Holiday. So many people poured into Brighton – police estimated there were 500,000 day visitors – that in places the shingle was invisible beneath the bodies.
13 August 1935,
Italy: 1,000 are reported killed when a dam bursts at Oveda.
29 August 1935,
US: Labor Day Hurricane of 1935–The most powerful hurricane to make landfall in the United States. A very small storm, this Category Five Hurricane tore through the Florida Keys with 180 mph winds, and a low pressure of 26.35 inches of Hg.
3 September 1935,
US: Over 200 are reported dead when a hurricane hits Florida.
20 October 1935,
UK: 11 people die in a 92 mph gale.
22 January 1937,
US: 150,000 are reported homeless when the Ohio River floods killing 16.
26 January 1937,
US: Cincinnati is paralysed as the Ohio flood death toll mounts to 135; 750,000 are reported homeless.
3 September 1937,
Hong Kong: 300 are reported dead after a typhoon strikes the colony.
10 December 1937,
Glasgow: 34 die and 92 are injured when an express train crashes in a blizzard.
11 July 1938,
Eskimos in the Arctic complain of a heat wave: it is 67 degrees F (19C).
21 September 1938,
US:Long Island Express of 1938–A classic east coast hurricane, this Category Three storm moved rapidly from Cape Hatteras, North Carolina into New England in a matter of just six hours killing 600 people.
21 October 1938,
Tokyo: 226 people are reported killed in a typhoon.
Oh, to get back to those halcyon days when weather was calmer and so much more predictable. Happy daze?