South Korea Climate & Average Weather Thru the Seasons
Zagreb, Croatia
In Zagreb, Croatia the mean annual temperature is 11.67C (53F). -3.00C (26.60F) is the coldest monthly average minimum temp (that comes about in January) while 27.00C (80.60F) is the warmest monthly average max temperature that takes place in July & August. The mean temperature range is 22.00C. Precipitation in Croatia comes to an average total of 864.00mm (34.02in) per year. Thus mean monthly precipitation is 72.00mm (2.83in). June is the most rainy month effected by an average of 95mm (3.74in) of precipitation occurring during 10 days while in March only 47mm (1.85in) of rain falls over 7 days. Croatia’s weather is effected by 96 days per year with greater than 0.1mm (0.004in) of rainfall. Relative humidity at Croatia averages 69.33333333% over the year. 60% is the minimum average monthly relative humidity to be found in April and 81% is the peak average monthly relative humidity ensueing in December. Croatia’s weather is effected by 1806 sunshine hours per year or 4.95 daily hours. There is a range of hours of sunshine from 1.3 per day in December to 8.7 per day in July. There is more info about the Croatia average precipitation September courtesy of this quality resource. Visit the link to go there. Free Croatia climate charts display a full review of the precipitation in Croatia.
Seoul, South Korea
In Seoul, South Korea the mean temperature annually is 11.54C (52.775F). -10.00C (14.00F) is the coldest monthly mean minimum temperature (that takes place in January) while 31.00C (87.80F) is the warmest monthly average high temperature transpiring in August. The range of mean temperatures over the year is 31.50C. Rainfall/ snowfall etc. in South Korea comes to an average total of 1258.00mm (49.53in) per annum. Thus mean monthly precipitation is 104.83mm (4.13in). July is the rainiest month when an average of 358mm (14.09in) of rain falling over a period of 14 days while in January only 17mm (0.67in) of rain falls over 3 days. South Korea’s weather is effected by 80 days per year with greater than 0.1mm (0.004in) of rainfall. Relative humidity at South Korea averages 69% annually. 63% is the most low mean monthly relative humidity that comes about in April and 81% is the peak mean monthly relative humidity ensueing in July. South Korea’s weather is effected by 2428 sunshine hours per year or 6.65 daily hours. Sunlight hours vary from 5.2 per day in December to 8.3 per day in May. Get a more full review of the climate in South Korea courtesy of the helpful website. This link covers basically everything you need to know. Free South Korea climate graphs expose a comprehensive synopsis of the sunlight hours in South Korea.
Pyongyang, North Korea
In Pyongyang, North Korea the mean annual temperature is 9.75C (49.55F). -13.00C (8.60F) is the coolest monthly average low temperature (that comes about in January) while 29.00C (84.20F) is the hottest monthly mean max temp that presents itself in the month of July & August. The mean temperature range is 33.00C. Rainfall/ snowfall etc. in North Korea is on average 925.00mm (36.42in) per annum. This is equivalent to average monthly precipitation of 77.08mm (3.03in). July is the most rainy month when an average of 237mm (9.33in) of rain falling over a period of 12 days while in February only 11mm (0.43in) of rain falls over 3 days. North Korea’s weather is effected by 75 days per year with greater than 0.1mm (0.004in) of rainfall. Relative humidity at North Korea averages 72.08333333% annually. 63% is the minimum average monthly relative humidity that comes about in April and 80% is the highest mean monthly relative humidity that presents itself in July & August. North Korea’s climate has 2687 sunshine hours per year or 7.36 hours per day. Sunshine hours range from 5.8 per day in December to 8.7 per day in June. Get a more comprehensive guide to the North Korea sunlight at the excellent website. Just click on the link to find out more. Free North Korea climate charts display a comprehensive synopsis of the rainfall in North Korea.



#reddit Salmon in Hot Water Rearing juvenile salmon at the relatively high temperature of 16°C causes skelet… #rulez
I think if you check "The Joy of Cooking" they'll describe how to cook a turkey in cheese cloth to keep it nice and moist. I know someone who swears by it.
They only seemed aggressive when they were deliberately switching goal posts after these guys from Popular Mechanics clearly explained and refuted their claims. They’re right. Those kids are pretty much calling everyone liars otherwise and aren’t open to be convinced to anything.
It sounds like blatant arrogance and misinformation on the part of the Loose Change side.
Shabbos will be hot near 100 with slight chance Thunderstorms.: Today is sunny with a high temperature near 91. To…
John Finn (04:14:56) :
So, also bearing in mind current solar activity, if 2009 does end up in the top 5 or 10 warmest, presumably you’ll have to accept that factors such as CO2 are driving temperatures up.
Several things:
1) There will be a time lag. I don't know how long, but prior sunspot / climate charts lead me to think it will be about 10 years for full impact. While all the waters cool there will be some places colder and some still warm (or maybe warmer if a strong wind drives warm air to the poles for cooling… like the East Coast of the U.S. when the West was freezing…)
2) It can be lots of things other than CO2 (i.e. we're crossing the galactic plane centerline, don't know ocean ridge vulcanism levels, exactly what IS the impact of all those asphalt surfaces and roofs? etc.) I'm not willing to attribute causality by elimination.
3) Warmer based on thermometers run by whom and with what 'adjustments' to their attitudes? By a fictional averaging method where a colder west gets averaged out by a less cold (but not hotter highs) East? With a constantly changing 'adjusted' past? No thanks. Straight time series, unadjusted, for 'many' locations, trend lines computed, then compared.
4) I'm not so arrogant as to think we know everything about climate. It is quite possible that there is something we don't understand where lower solar output could cause an oscillation that would make a brief up, prior to a plunge down. Ignorance of one thing is not proof an another… and on geologic scales 'brief' could be years, decades, centuries, …
I will grant that a cold sun and hot planet is certainly cause to question 'the sun did it' as causal theory. Not eliminate, but strongly question.
With the combination of all the ‘cooling factors’ that everyone appears to think are now in place, I’d be expecting to see regular negative anomalies in all records.
Then you would be wrong.
It's a highly variable chaotic system so expecting 'all records' to do anything will fail. I would expect to see somewhat more irregular negative anomalies in some (maybe many) records, perhaps with the number increasing slowly over about a decade+ time scale.
Given a 30 year PDO and a 180 (ish) year solar cycle you can make a decent guess that it takes about 15 years and 90 years respectively for the cycles to turn. Then you have to un-Fourier these cycles onto each other to get the net today… And this ignores the 1500 year Bond Event cycle and …
Get the point? You seem to think we ought to know what to expect. I'm pretty sure we don't know what to expect, but we can measure our ignorance against what the world really does and maybe learn something.
I don't totally agree with your sources of geothermal energy. The examples you give are extremes on the high temperature side. These are not generally available whereas the geothermal energy differential of the earth just 5 or more feet below the surface is available in the majority of populated areas. At that depth the earth is cooler in summer and warmer in winter and is able to provide efficient cooling in summer and efficient heating in winter.
at minimum, alerts; but temperature is a surprisingly popular request, so I think it'll make it in.
My body temperature is always high man
turkeys today are bred hybrids and have a different muscular structure to even ten years ago hence many cookbooks allow 25 or 35 minutes per lb when actual cooking takes much less and is falling off the bone. I find too that many purchased turkeys are prebasted thereby preventing drying but it is not as good as basting with butter under the skin when dressing most prebasted are using butter flavored corn oil so called butterball refer to shape not butter. I always place a cup or two of ginger ale in bottom of pan and butter under skin of breast . the ginger ale adds a nice taste and color when finishing and also makes a nice gravy too.
Call the company…there has to be a number on the box or somewhere and ask to have them send you the instructions……and ask them while you have them on the phone the "heat" question. I would think the higher the number the hotter it is….no?
The best kind of bomb is one that would cause all Microsoft products to disappear.
Gettin chilled up here.. Minimum temperature here is 16• c