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Thursday, May 6, 2021

"Four Decade Global Snowfall Trend"

I discovered a blog yesterday
that I highly recommend
for climate science fans. 
The editor is highly educated
and looks like a professional 
model too, proving that life
is not fair !  
Bookmark the address below and give her blog a try:
https://phzoe.com/
The slightly edited article below
is from that blog:
Richard Greene
  Ye Editor, COB, CEO, VP,
Director, Secretary,
Wine Steward and
Executive Washroom Attendant. 
 

 
 
Source: 

"Is anyone curious to know what the global snowfall trend was in this era of “extreme global warming”?


I was. Luckily NASA covertly provides us with all the necessary data to figure this out.


January 2021 -- I downloaded all available monthly images from 1980 to 2020 (inclusive), such as the one shown above, then I converted the pixel colors back to data using the provided scale.


The error margin is small and time persistent and so this is a clever way to extract a rich data set which I haven’t been able to find anywhere else.


As far as I know, you will not see this anywhere else. All other snowfall or snow-cover data sets are limited by region or date and so researchers reach the wrong conclusion!


Here is the result of my quest:
Global Snowfall
0.2773 -> 0.2854 is +2.90%


Snowfall has increased 
by nearly 3 percent 
over the last four decades.


Let’s also see how this breaks down  
by North and South Hemisphere:
 
North Hemisphere Snowfall
0.2722 -> 0.2468 is -9.35%


South Hemisphere Snowfall
0.6257 -> 0.7057 is +12.77%



Correction:
The units are in kilograms divided by 100000 (better known as centigrams), not kilograms. I forgot about the original scale and mislabeled the charts. I won’t fix the chart. The purpose was to find the trend.


... I know I’m completely right about the global trend because you can’t find the global trend ANYWHERE (?), even know though the data is obviously available to NASA (that’s how the images are generated).


The truth is hard to find. But I try"