– Advertisement –
Similar Posts

Open Mic MONDAY 22nd JUNE 2026
FACT OF THE DAY: If you could drive a car straight up at 95 km/h, it would take you less…

OPEN MIC SUNDAY 21st JUNE 2026
FACT OF THE DAY: Mars is shaped like a rugby ball rather than a perfect sphere due to its unique…

Open Mic FRIDAY 19th JUNE 2026
FACT OF THE DAY: Astronauts can grow up to 5 cm (2 inches) taller in space because the lack of…

OPEN MIC THURSDAY 18th JUNE 2026
FACT OF THE DAY: Magnetars have magnetic fields so strong they could strip the iron from the hemoglobin in your…

Open Mic WEDNESDAY 17th JUNE 2026
FACT OF THE DAY: There are more trees on Earth than stars in the Milky Way. (About 3 trillion trees…

Open Mic TUESDAY 16th JUNE 2026
FACT OF THE DAY: The human body contains enough DNA to stretch from the Sun to Pluto and back roughly…



https://www.rt.com/shows/crosstalk/382643-washington-politics-russia-leaks/
See what Trump is up against as 40 Billionaires who own Washington are out to kill off trump and replace him with their puppet.
https://climate.nasa.gov/
CO2 level almost at 406
March 2017 – 405.92
February 2017 was the second-warmest February in 137 years of modern record-keeping, according to a monthly analysis of global temperatures by scientists at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) in New York.
Last month was 1.1 degrees Celsius warmer than the mean February temperature from 1951-1980. The two top February temperature anomalies have occurred during the past two years.
February 2016 was the hottest on record, at 1.3 degrees Celsius warmer than the February mean temperature. February 2017’s temperature was 0.20 degrees Celsius cooler than February 2016.
The monthly analysis by the GISS team is assembled from publicly available data acquired by about 6,300 meteorological stations around the world, ship- and buoy-based instruments measuring sea surface temperature, and Antarctic research stations.
The modern global temperature record begins around 1880 because previous observations didn’t cover enough of the planet. Monthly analyses are sometimes updated when additional data becomes available, and the results are subject to change.
Related links
For more information on NASA GISS’s monthly temperature analysis, visit data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp.
For more information about NASA GISS, visit http://www.giss.nasa.gov.
Media contacts
Michael Cabbage
NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, New York, N.Y.
212-678-5516
mcabbage@nasa.gov
Leslie McCarthy
NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, New York, N.Y.
212-678-5507
leslie.m.mccarthy@nasa.gov