The Pennsylvania Weather Book

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Product Description

The weather has always been a favorite topic of conversation. Undoubtedly, someone must have said to Noah, "I thought they said it was supposed to let up on Tuesday." Over a century ago, American essayist Charles Dudley Warner wrote in the Hartford Courant, "Everybody talks about the weather but nobody does anything about it." And now with the advent of the 24-hour Weather Channel and high-tech radar and satellite imagery, we have more information about the weather at our disposal than ever before. But what about weather in the past? Is the climate changing? Are the summers hotter now than ever before? Were winters colder when our grandparents were children? In The Pennsylvania Weather Book, meteorologist Ben Gelber provides the first comprehensive survey of 250 years of recorded weather in this state. He reports on noteworthy weather happenings by category (snowstorms, rainstorms, cold and heat waves, thunderstorms, and tropical storms) and places them in historical context. Throughout the book, Gelber clearly defines meteorological terms and explains what creates weather events. The book features appendices and tables containing useful references for average temperatures, precipitation, snowfall, and climate data. It also provides a brief history of the weather watchers who contributed to the state's meteorological records since the late eighteenth century. This volume will serve as a valuable resource for weather professionals, amateurs, and local enthusiasts alike. Did you know that: * December 25, 1964, was the hottest Pennsylvania Christmas in modern times, featuring a high of 70 degrees in Newell? * Philadelphia shivered through its coldest day on record on January 17, 1982, when the daylight maximum temperature was zero at 2:48 p.m.? * Pennsylvania has an average of thirty to forty thunderstorms annually? * Although the average annual number of tornadoes in Pennsylvania is 11, a state record of 59 was counted in 1998? * The winter of 1985-86 brought an odd cluster of holiday floods in western Pennsylvania that occurred on Election Day, Thanksgiving Day, Martin Luther King Day, and President's Day? * The wettest year in Pennsylvania since the beginning of reliable records in 1895 occurred in 1996, when the state wide average of rain was 56.08 inches? Or that that driest year happened at the beginning of the notorious Dust Bowl year in 1930, when the average anual precipitation in Pennsylvania was a scant 25.37 inches?


Product Details

Publisher Rutgers University Press
Format
  • Kindle Edition
  • Kindle Book
Author Ben Gelber
Label Rutgers University Press
Dewey Decimal Number 551.69748
Studio Rutgers University Press
Number Of Pages 288
Title The Pennsylvania Weather Book
Release Date 2002-06-17
Publication Date 2002-06-17
Manufacturer Rutgers University Press

Customer Reviews

Great weather source book for PA

Review by Bomojaz, 2006-11-05

Weather watchers should be ecstatic with this book, which is a history of the weather in Pennsylvania. After a couple of chapters dealing with the weather and climate in general in the Keystone State, including info on weather-watchers and observation stations around the state, Gelber gets to the heart of the book: individual chapters, arranged chronologically, concerned with the chief weather phenomena: winter storms, cold waves, heat waves, windstorms, tornadoes, floods, and hurricanes. Major events throughout recorded history in the state are described for each phenomenon. Numerous tables are included, and detailed information regarding extremes and averages from temperature to snowfall amounts grace the appendices. Granted, the book is basically one tragedy after another, but that's just the nature of the beast. Certain events will jar the memory of every reader; for me I remember best the floods from Hurricane Agnes and the huge snowfall amounts from the blizzard of January 1996. Lots of photos are also included. The book is well written and well researched, and it's an excellent source of information (and entertainment) on the one thing about which everyone talks but nobody does anything about (even in Pennsylvania).