2012 makes the top ten list of Twin Cities' warmest Januarys
Step aside, 1933. You've been bumped down to ninth place on the list of warm Januarys. And at least the first week of February is looking pretty toasty, as well.
Step aside, 1933. You've been bumped down to ninth place on the list of warm Januarys. And at least the first week of February is looking pretty toasty, as well.
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MPR's Paul Huttner crunches the numbers and says this month could be the warmest ever -- when compared with average temperatures at MSP airport -- in 121 years. So far temperatures overall have been 16.7 degrees higher than the average in the Twin Cities area.
Enjoy it while you can: The National Weather Service says a cold front will sweep through soon. Climatologists are saying this will likely be the warmest start to January we've ever seen, and the operator of a maple syrup business tells Kare 11 he's astounded to see the sap flowing.
More winter-like temperatures are arriving, after a weekend that felt downright spring-like. Fargo and Grand Forks both surpassed 50 to break long-standing record highs.
It's official: This spring was the warmest on record in the Twin Cities, and it was the second-wettest, too. Temperatures during the meteorological spring -- defined as March through May -- averaged 54 degrees at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, the highest since modern record-keeping began in 1873.
The average temperature in the metro was 26.3 degrees, according to data from the National Weather Service. The St. Cloud airport recorded 23.4 degrees.
There were no record-breaking hot days, but red thermometers steadily turned June through August of 2012 into the warmest season on the books in Duluth. Forecasters think a 14-month streak of above-normal temperatures will continue in September. As for rainfall, it's been pretty sparse since the deluge that flooded the region in late June.
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