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by handmodel
1483 days ago
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The planet clearly is warming but I also agree this method is useless by itself. For Los Angeles (my city) the data goes back 145 days a year. If temperature has not been increasing (and therefore each individual day follows an identical distribution) that would still mean that 1/145 days we'd see a record high in Los Angeles - so about two highs a year. Highs in Los Angeles are obviously going to be correlated to highs in San Diego - but not exactly because of cloud cover and stuff so its reasonable to think that even if we were in a boring unchanging climate we'd still see hundreds if not thousands of records set every day across the country. |
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With a normal distribution you wouldn't expect even one record to be set every year. The expected case would be zero records in a year.