http://www.esrl.noaa.../iadv/index.php
Choose your site, choose your gas, choose your type of plot. This year's data is currently flagged as "preliminary" and has not been curated. The three high-latitude stations are Barrow (Alaska, US), Alert (Nunavut, Canada) and NY-Alesund (Svalbard, Sweden). Neither of the latter two shows anything out of the ordinary. Barrow has an anomalously high recent reading, but similar readings in the past have been excluded as inaccurate. None of the above are particularly close to the East Siberian deposits, though.
Climate Science
Started by pottyprof, Aug 02 2011 12:08
101 replies to this topic
#101
Posted 17 December 2011 - 14:00
#102
Posted 17 December 2011 - 14:11
songster, on 17 December 2011 - 14:00 , said:
http://www.esrl.noaa.../iadv/index.php
Choose your site, choose your gas, choose your type of plot. This year's data is currently flagged as "preliminary" and has not been curated. The three high-latitude stations are Barrow (Alaska, US), Alert (Nunavut, Canada) and NY-Alesund (Svalbard, Sweden). Neither of the latter two shows anything out of the ordinary. Barrow has an anomalously high recent reading, but similar readings in the past have been excluded as inaccurate. None of the above are particularly close to the East Siberian deposits, though.
Choose your site, choose your gas, choose your type of plot. This year's data is currently flagged as "preliminary" and has not been curated. The three high-latitude stations are Barrow (Alaska, US), Alert (Nunavut, Canada) and NY-Alesund (Svalbard, Sweden). Neither of the latter two shows anything out of the ordinary. Barrow has an anomalously high recent reading, but similar readings in the past have been excluded as inaccurate. None of the above are particularly close to the East Siberian deposits, though.
Good find
1 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users













