I have a friend who lives down the coast from Donna Nook. I'll ask her if she experienced the sudden heat rise.One curious event on the UK's second-hottest day on record was a 'heat burst' at the oddly-named Donna Nook on the Lincolnshire coast. At 9pm, a decaying thunderstorm brought hot air rushing to the surface, raising the temperature from 22 to 32 Celsius in just half an hour. It returned to its previous level in about half that time. The phenomenon is pretty rare in the UK, and a temperature that high (90F in old money) at that time of the evening is just extraordinary.
Extreme weather in Japan has killed 23 people, hospitalised 12,751 (!):
Hot in Japan
Not only the elderly, either.
Awful. Would that be classified as an epidemic if it was a disease outbreak?
Had a quick look for related matter to do with people saying "it feels like the Sun seems hotter than usual."I just learned about heat bursts, they are claimed to have created some extraordinary effects.
https://weather.com/science/weather-explainers/news/heat-bursts-thunderstorms-explained
Skies over an Indonesian province turned red over the weekend, thanks to the widespread forest fires which have plagued huge parts of the country. One resident in Jambi province, who captured pictures of the sky, said the haze had "hurt her eyes and throat". Every year, fires in Indonesia create a smoky haze that can end up blanketing the entire South East Asian region. A meteorology expert told the BBC the unusual sky was caused by a phenomenon known as Rayleigh scattering. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-49793047
Revelation 6:12
12 And I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal, and, lo, there was a great earthquake; and the sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and the moon became as blood;
Just a bit curious to know... as the ice is reportedly in meltdown in certain places around the world, surely that'll mean that the sea and ocean volumes (surfaces) must also increase, and in so doing increase the air pressures above them?So it's due to compression and excited molecules?
Any Idea what are the effects (i.e. on the basis that if you have an increase of something, then it must affect something else) 'Xanatic?'The air pressure per square meter will not increase due to that.
Ah... now I get what you're saying! You mean what it does is spread the extra volume of water out onto the coastal land surfaces, yes?The increase will be in water surface area. That should mean more moderate temperatures, as water tends to have that effect on surrounding areas.
Desertified areas will receive more rainfall and more green vegetation will grow.The increase will be in water surface area. That should mean more moderate temperatures, as water tends to have that effect on surrounding areas.
Desertified areas will receive more rainfall and more green vegetation will grow.
So, not all bad then.
Desertified areas don't get constant rain.Raising water level also floods productive areas drowning the vegetation.
Plus constant rain keeps the ground cold and delays crops.