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Old 07-31-2016, 01:40 AM
 
Location: Melbourne, Australia
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Palider View Post
In history? Are you serious?
Ok then, "recent" history. It'd still register as one of the coldest in recorded history imo. Either that or Southern Brazil gets more snow events than I thought on average.
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Old 07-31-2016, 01:10 PM
 
Location: Seoul
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ghost-likin View Post
The storms in Northeast US are insane,the Low pressure moves from Pacific and cross all the US until Northeast? this Storm that Gfs are showing comes from Pacific too,crosses Southern Bolivia,Paraguay them comes along the Jet Stream to the Coast of Southern Brazil,in the same time an High pressures coming from South sits on Northern Argentina/Paraguay and brings cold weather,this is the classic setup of Winter Storms in Southern Brazil.

But thats too far,I dont think will happens,this storm would historic,maybe stronger than the one of 2013.
Not really, the low pressure usually comes from Canada and sometimes settles over Hudson Bay and occasionally dips into Quebec or Ontario which brings us record breaking temperatures like we got in 2014 and 2015. I'm not the most knowledgeable about this, it would be better to ask some of the other regulars who live in the Northeast US
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Old 07-31-2016, 01:21 PM
 
Location: Top of the South, NZ
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Quote:
Originally Posted by marlaver View Post
After a week or so, it felt very mild here today. I made a walk with 13ºC outside, wearing only a light sport jacket and i didn't felt any cool at all.

In Patagonia, it was another cold day in Maquinchao. Last 9 days there and the snow accumulated it hasn't melted yet:



Not bad for a place in SH at same latitude of New York, right? I think even the newyorkers cold lovers would sign a week of temps like that with their eyes closed.
A huge departure from the averages. It must go both ways to get averages like that

Maquinchao has the same winter averages, altitude and latitude as the coldest location in my region, although only has a quarter of the winter rainfall and is 350km from the sea rather than 45km.

Last edited by Joe90; 07-31-2016 at 01:40 PM..
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Old 07-31-2016, 01:37 PM
 
Location: João Pessoa,Brazil(The easternmost point of Americas)
2,540 posts, read 2,003,466 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Warszawa View Post
Not really, the low pressure usually comes from Canada and sometimes settles over Hudson Bay and occasionally dips into Quebec or Ontario which brings us record breaking temperatures like we got in 2014 and 2015. I'm not the most knowledgeable about this, it would be better to ask some of the other regulars who live in the Northeast US
Im talking about Northeaster storms,I remember the track on the Blizzard on Washington DC early this year.
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Old 07-31-2016, 02:13 PM
 
Location: João Pessoa,Brazil(The easternmost point of Americas)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe90 View Post
A huge departure from the averages. It must go both ways to get averages like that

Maquinchao has the same winter averages, altitude and latitude as the coldest location in my region, although only has a quarter of the winter rainfall and is 350km from the sea rather than 45km.
Yup,Maquinchao is more "Continental",it can be very hot in summer too.
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Old 07-31-2016, 03:07 PM
 
Location: 30461
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Kind of curious, but how cold have some of the low elevation coastal areas of far southern Brazil (such as Porto Alegre) gotten this season?

Edit: Wunderground is saying a seasonal low of 35 F (~1.7 C) for Porto Alegre on June 13th. Freezing weather must be really rare there.

Last edited by BullochResident; 07-31-2016 at 03:16 PM..
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Old 07-31-2016, 03:19 PM
 
Location: Top of the South, NZ
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ghost-likin View Post
Yup,Maquinchao is more "Continental",it can be very hot in summer too.
I am thinking Maquinchao might be warmer on average during winter, as both places have the same winter averages, but Maquinchao has the greater deviation.
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Old 07-31-2016, 03:30 PM
 
Location: João Pessoa,Brazil(The easternmost point of Americas)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BullochResident View Post
Kind of curious, but how cold have some of the low elevation coastal areas of far southern Brazil (such as Porto Alegre) gotten this season?

Edit: Wunderground is saying a seasonal low of 35 F (~1.7 C) for Porto Alegre on June 13th. Freezing weather must be really rare there.
The lowest temperature there was 0.9C on early june.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe90 View Post
I am thinking Maquinchao might be warmer on average during winter, as both places have the same winter averages, but Maquinchao has the greater deviation.
I think thats because this Place in New Zealand are wetter,who dont allow great departures and keep average lower,while Maquinchao have great differences between day and night because its drier, how I writed to Marlaver before.
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Old 07-31-2016, 03:56 PM
 
Location: Top of the South, NZ
22,216 posts, read 21,655,217 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ghost-likin View Post
The lowest temperature there was 0.9C on early june.



I think thats because this Place in New Zealand are wetter,who dont allow great departures and keep average lower,while Maquinchao have great differences between day and night because its drier, how I writed to Marlaver before.
The NZ location has slightly bigger differences between night and day temperature though
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Old 07-31-2016, 04:01 PM
 
Location: João Pessoa,Brazil(The easternmost point of Americas)
2,540 posts, read 2,003,466 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe90 View Post
The NZ location has slightly bigger differences between night and day temperature though
You have the climate data from this place?
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