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Post by fredzl4dh on Aug 29, 2015 13:14:52 GMT
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Post by walnut on Aug 29, 2015 14:16:55 GMT
Looks very comfortable to me, but I don't know how it compares to today in that locale.
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Post by missouriboy on Aug 29, 2015 16:11:31 GMT
Thanks for that Fred.
I note that the winters and summers of the years 1882-83, 1883-84 and 1884-85 of the Sussex, England area were generally warmer and dryer than normal, but not unprecedented according to the author (pp. 279-86). In comparison, these seasons in North America are recorded as amongst the coldest, wettest and violent ever recorded (A Chronological Listing of Early Weather Events, as posted by Sigurdur). The effects of Krakatoa (8/26/1883) appear to have been superimposed upon a pre-existing climate pattern on opposite sides of the Atlantic.
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