Introduction
| Using a 1992-2001 base period as shown in the adjacent blended temperature product of satellite and in-situ data, anomalous warmth during the period September-November in the Northern Hemisphere was closely correlated to the location of upper level ridges of high pressure. These ridges of high pressure (depicted by positive 500 millibar height anomalies) were centered near the Canadian-U.S. border as well as Siberia into Mongolia and China. Temperature anomalies calculated from in-situ station data using a 1961-1990 base period also show the warmer than average temperatures in these regions with cooler than average temperatures restricted to much of Australia and Argentina. Similar temperature distributions were present during November.
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Temperature

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- Based on data available at the time of this report, the global average land and ocean temperature for boreal fall (September-November) was 0.57°C (1.03°F) above the 1880-2000 mean which ties with 1997 as warmest (0.46°C / 0.83°F above the 1961-1990 mean)
- During September-November, land temperatures were the warmest on record (0.79°C /1.42°F above average) while ocean temperatures were second warmest (0.47°C / 0.85°F above average)
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- Temperatures averaged across the Northern Hemisphere were also warmest on record for the period September-November, or 0.67°C (1.21°F) above the 1880-2000 mean, eclipsing the old record set during the El Niño fall of 1998
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Precipitation
- Much above average precipitation fell across northern Argentina and along the U.S. Gulf Coast
- Drier than average weather prevailed across the northeastern U.S. as well as India and the western Mediterranean region
- An active tropical weather season boosted rainfall totals to much above average from southern Japan to Taiwan, with much drier conditions arriving by November
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Microwave Sounding Unit Data

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- Fall temperatures in the lowest 8km (5 miles) of the troposphere were 0.10°C (0.18°F) above average
- Lower tropospheric temperatures in November were above average (0.13°C / 0.23°F)
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- September-November temperature was below average in the lower stratosphere, with a departure of -0.34°C (-0.61°F)
- This was the 9th consecutive November with below average stratospheric temperatures (-0.38°C / -0.68°F)
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Lower tropospheric and lower stratospheric temperature data are collected by NOAA's TIROS-N polar-orbiting satellites and adjusted for time-dependent biases by NASA and the Global Hydrology and Climate Center at the University of Alabama in Huntsville.
For additional details on precipitation and temperatures in June see the Global Regional page .
*Based on preliminary data available at the time of this report.
References:
Peterson, T.C. and R.S. Vose, 1997: An Overview of the Global Historical Climatology Network Database. Bull. Amer. Meteorol. Soc., 78, 2837-2849.
For all climate questions other than questions concerning this report, please contact the National Climatic Data Center's Climate Services Division:
Climate Services Division NOAA/National Climatic Data Center 151 Patton Avenue, Room 120 Asheville, NC 28801-5001 fax: 828-271-4876 phone: 828-271-4800 email: ncdc.orders@noaa.gov
For questions about this report, please contact:
David Easterling NOAA/National Climatic Data Center 151 Patton Avenue Asheville, NC 28801-5001 fax: 828-271-4328 email: David.Easterling@noaa.gov
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Jay Lawrimore NOAA/National Climatic Data Center 151 Patton Avenue Asheville, NC 28801-5001 fax: 828-271-4328 email: Jay.Lawrimore@noaa.gov
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