Daniel T Davis on 2006-08-10
I used this graph for my ACE supporting details activity question # 1
This link has been bookmarked by 33 people . It was first bookmarked on 17 Jul 2006, by Daniel T Davis.
This is the answer of Q1 of supporting details activity. It shows the changes of global temperature from 1880 to 2004.


supporting details activity for ADS 2008 internet research class, 22/05/08

The average global temperature for 2004 of 14.60 degrees Celsius (58.28 degrees Fahrenheit) makes it the fourth warmest year on record. October and November of 2004 were the hottest of those months on record since recordkeeping began in 1880. February of 2004 was the second warmest, and March, April and December were the third warmest of those three months.

Diploma Internet research Supporting Detail Activities "global temperature"
Global Temperature Rise Accelerating
The average global temperature for 2004 of 14.60 degrees Celsius (58.28 degrees Fahrenheit) makes it the fourth warmest year on record. October and November of 2004 were the hottest of those months on record since recordkeeping began in
Global Temperature Rise Accelerating
The average global temperature for 2004 of 14.60 degrees Celsius (58.28 degrees Fahrenheit) makes it the fourth warmest year on record. October and November of 2004 were the hottest of those months on record since recordkeeping began in 1880. February of 2004 was the second warmest, and March, April and December were the third warmest of those three months.
this is the answer to support the question number 1
The average global temperatures for 2004 shows the fourth warmest year in record and the temperatures changed from the 1970s until the last five years of the new decade.
the figure describe the rising the of global average over last several decades

Copyright © 2004 Earth Policy Institute
Global Temperature Rise Accelerating


This is the graph that describes the rising temperature the last decades

The average global temperature for 2004 of 14.60 degrees Celsius (58.28 degrees Fahrenheit) makes it the fourth warmest year on record. October and November of 2004 were the hottest of those months on record since recordkeeping began in 1880. February of 2004 was the second warmest, and March, April and December were the third warmest of those three months.

(See data for figure.)
These record-breaking readings, which come from the global series maintained by NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, continue a trend of rising global temperatures. The average temperature of 14.01 degrees Celsius in the 1970s rose to 14.26 degrees in the 1980s. In the 1990s it reached 14.40 degrees. And during the first five years of this new decade, it has averaged 14.59 degrees Celsius. (Se



Daniel T Davis on 2006-08-10
I used this graph for my ACE supporting details activity question # 1
Daniel T Davis on 2006-08-10
I think this is a great graph.
Copyright © 2004 Earth Policy Institute
Global Temperature Rise Accelerating
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19 July 2006
Diploma: Internet for Academic study and research
ACE
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