🇫🇷 Climate History of Brest (Brittany)
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- Опубликовано: 21 янв 2024
- If you followed a little bit the news about past or modern climate change, you probably saw several times something like "temperature will rise by 4°C", or "temperatures were 10°C colder during Stone Age", etc.
This kind of information does not permit to figure out what kind of environment was going on.
This simulation has been performed on 16 cities around the world, I aim to locate over the 21,000 years the best modern climate analogue for each of them. Enjoy !
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• Secret Sounds - Move Ya
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Your dance/techno music selection is incredible, as is the content in your videos. Thank you.
Some crazy climate flips going on in NW Europe towards the end of the Ice-Age
Good work.
Having lived there... I think Dallas, Texas would be interesting for having one of the hottest summers in a Cfa, Csa, or Cwa climate outside of the Indian subcontinent. Very dry late summers suggest that it is now on the borderline between Cfa and Csa climates.
Another, but it would be somewhat like Brest (with warmer winters) would be San Francisco. Some projections have California's coast as a near-desert due to a paucity of pollen. Of course, redwoods have long lives and issue little pollen, so these can be projected as deserts if one looks only at pollen. Ironically, America's Great Basin, which averages as deserts in valleys and cool Mediterranean in mountains. The Great Basin had deep, large lakes in places like Death Valley.
very cool, i would like to see one for montreal
Montreal was a climatic roller-coaster. Today it is on the borderline between Dfa/Dfb (like Lansing, Michigan) but if you saw the worldwide pattern it at times was as cold as Greenland. Of course, much of that was altitude because the ice sheet was really high there.
Global warming could make it Cfa, like New York City or Philadelphia.
Very cool, love your videos.
Do you plan to do a third version of the Chicxulub impact simulation, with actual visuals of the impact, like in the Aitken Basin video?
Cool.
Are the pink bits supposed to be areas where the climate classification at the time is (predicted to be) Cfb?
areas with same temperature min/max and rainfall min/max x)
What is EM at 2:02? Is it supposed to be a wetter version of ET? Or something else?
No, it means less cold winter (above - 10°C)
@@Kaldisti Assuming that EM also requires the warmest month to have an average of less than 10 degrees C(thereby making it a milder version of ET), mind if I ask why a separate climate zone is needed to represent the above?
@@gunguir9264 Because I wanted to isolate the Icelandic climate, which is the only one example of polar oceanic climate, i.e with low season thermal amplitude
@@Kaldisti Got it; thanks!
@@KaldistiI always thought that would be the subpolar oceanic climate (Cfc) with above freezing winters as found in the Kerguelen islands or the Aleutian islands but I assume that their warmest month has a temperature higher than 10°C.
Did you make that new polar climate classification or did you find it somewhere else?
I quickly searched for the EM type but couldn't find it.