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Warm Earth

For the third time this century, the world has set a new record for the hottest year on the
books.
Last year was the warmest year since scientists started keeping records in 1880, according to
a January 16 joint announcement by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration and NASA.
In 2014, the average global surface temperature measured 0.69 degrees Celsius above the
20th centurys average temperature of 13.9 C. The rise makes 2014 the 38th consecutive
year with above-average heat. In 2010 and 2005, which now tie for the second-warmest year,
average temperatures were 0.65 degrees above last centurys average.
Steamy seas largely pushed the year into the record books: Global ocean surface temperatures
were the highest ever recorded at 0.57 degrees C higher than last centurys average of 16.1
C. Average temperatures over land ranked the fourth highest on record.
The continued increase in temperatures is largely due to growth in greenhouse gas emissions,
NOAA and NASA scientists said in a press conference. The trends in greenhouse gases are
continuing and so we may anticipate further record highs in the years to come, said Gavin
Schmidt, director of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York City.
The agencies also noted that the Arctic is warming twice as fast as lower latitudes.
Despite the worldwide warm-up, much of North America saw unusually cool conditions
during 2014. Variations in the polar jet stream moved cold air southward into North America
and helped cause a particularly cold beginning of the year.

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