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Earthweek |
Weather Journal | AMS Glossary | CampusCam
Blacksburg Weather
Weather Underground: Blacksburg, Virginia Forecast
Included are links to archived daily climate summaries, astronomical data, and current tropical storms.
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The data for the Weather Underground clickable image, the uswx.com
summary, and the past 24 hours conditions are all from the Virginia Tech airport, which is
also the source for the Blacksburg weather shown on the Weather Channel. The
data from the climate summaries are from the NWS (not the airport) sensors.
One may have to scroll down to find Blacksburg on the NWS text regional weather
summary, which is the text for the overview given on the NOAA weather radio broadcasts.
- AccuWeather: Hourly predicted conditions for Blacksburg.
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The
National Weather Service Forecast Office - Blacksburg: Local, regional and national
forecasts; information on and visuals from the NEXRAD radar; links
to other weather information providers. The Hyrdometeorological Prediction Center has links to several graphics for short-range weather predictions.
A useful link is a meteorology calculator, which has conversions between
temperature scales and calculations of relative humidity,
wind-chill temperature, and heat index. A link for astronomical information (sunrise, etc.) is from the U. S. Naval Observatory.
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Kevin Myatt: Myatt, a copy editor for The Roanoke Times, is its principal weather geek. Current entries for his Weather Journal are published in the paper on Wednesdays.
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Virginia State Climatology
Office: Weather facts about Virginia, plus links to other
weather-related sites.
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National
Weather Service: National: ACTIVE ALERTS · FORECAST MAPS · RADAR · RIVERS, LAKES, ...
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Climate
Prediction Center: Data and reports on monitoring and predictions from
NOAA. Includes 710 day, 1014 day, monthly, and seasonal forecasts. It also has drought, severe weather and El Niño forecasts and assessments.
This site also has archived daily weather maps (in very large PDF files). Other sites from NOAA for getting climate data are the National Centers for Environmental Information, and The new U.S. Climate Normals are here. What do they tell us about climate change? (May 7, 2021). .
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The NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS), at Columbia University in New York City, is a laboratory of the Earth-Sun Exploration Division of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center and a unit of the Columbia University Earth Institute. Research at GISS emphasizes a broad study of global climate change.
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Intellicast: This site provides
weather information for the United States and the world. Many of the maps, etc., from other links on this page are produced by Intellicast.
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The Weather Channel Home Page:
One can get different types of information including weather maps (list of current and forecast maps with links to small images) and
composites of upper-air, wind-gust, and wind-speed maps.
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USA Today - Weather
News: This site provides USA Today forecasts and weather news for the
day.
USA Today also has a Guide to the science of the atmosphere.
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Unisys Weather: A
comprehensive set of pages with current maps (surface, upper-air, satellite)
plus archives for surface weather maps, hurricane-track maps, climate models,
and much more. Their Upper Air Data
Details is a good primer on upper-air maps and has links to the current
ones at the different levels.
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Hurricanes: During hurricane season (1 June - 30 November), many sites
such as the Weather Underground have pages with links to information about current and
past hurricanes. Here is the
forecast for Atlantic seasonal hurricane activity. For historical information, a good site is the Past Hurricane History
page from the National Hurricane Center. For each year, there is an image map with the storm tracks of all
storms plus a list of their names. Clicking on a name gives maps and detailed
information about that storm. Two sites with nice summaries of significant
hurricanes from the past are the Unisys
Classic Atlantic Hurricanes and Virginia's
Hurricanes.
2000 was the 100th anniversary of the Galveston Hurricane, which killed
6000-8000 people. NPR has a
RealAudio discussion about the hurricane. On 20 September 2002, NPR Audio
had a 20-minute discussion
about a possible category 5 hurricane hitting New Orleans. The TV show NovaScienceNOW has several videos on hurricanes (enter hurricanes in the search box). Here is a GEOS-12 Visible Channel 1-minute interval SRSO Imagery for Hurricane Isabel from September 13, 2003. (It may take a while to load.) The National Weather Service and DealAid's Hurricane Guide are two resources that cover hurricane preparedness in depth.
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El Niño. El Niño is the name given for an
ocean/climate phenomenon which happens every four to seven years and, when it
is intense, has a significant effect on climate throughout the world. The
1997–1998 El Niño is, by most measures, the most intense
presentation this century. There are many web links to both the phenomenon and
some of its effects. This NOAA Theme
Page contains many links describing the phenomenon.
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Steve Newman's Earthweek: A Diary of the Planet is published weekly in
many papers: Weekly summary highlighted map, Included in the weekly summary page are global high
and low temperatures plus hurricanes, earthquakes, extreme flooding, etc.,
which have occurred during the previous week. The Eaarthweek home page has daily updaes and links to previous week summaries.
Department of GeoSciences
4044 Derring Hall, Virginia Tech
926 West Campus Drive
Blacksburg, VA 24061
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Most recent update: 27 June 2021.
E-mail for comments and questions
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