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by subsubzero
672 days ago
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This is total fiction, Colorado as a whole has been getting way more snow per year on average in the past 15 years(except the 1990s which were very snowy) than at any time in the past 120 years, I know I live in Colorado and crunched the numbers myself. I pulled the numbers from the NOAA gov site. I have both rain and snow totals so as you can see mother nature is doing her part, its just that the population has exploded here in the past 15 years(15% or 800,000 new people since 2010) and that is what is driving down the water supply. See data by decade below: Snow Totals - taken from https://psl.noaa.gov/boulder/bouldersnow.html 1900's
72.34 avg 1910's
66.19 avg 1920's
63.83 avg 1930's
54.65 avg 1940's
87.85 avg 1950's
84.45 avg 1960's
77.22 avg 1970's
81.2 avg 1980's
65.06 avg 1990's
98.32 avg 2000's
84.25 avg 2010's
94.79 avg 2020's
97.52 avg over 4 years not 10 rain totals taken from - https://psl.noaa.gov/boulder/Boulder.mm.precip.html 1900's
19.21 avg 1910's
18.12 avg 1920's
18.61 avg 1930's
16.46 avg 1940's
21.72 avg 1950's
18.49 avg 1960's
17.8 avg 1970's
18.35 avg 1980's
19.71 avg 1990's
22.68 avg 2000's
19.04 avg 2010's
22.25 avg 2020's
19.84 avg over 4 years not 10 |
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