Go to any weather-reporting site and find the daily climate report for the previous day for the location nearest to you. Find and describe the minimum, maximum, and average temperatures, as well as the precipitation level. Compare these to the normal values. Describe how these values relate to weather and climate.
In addition, describe how distance from the ocean, ocean current, latitude, elevation, and relative location of mountain ranges (if any) affect the climate in your area.
It has to be Wisconsin weather.
Answers
Explanation:
Daily summaries answer questions such as
What were the high and low temperatures at a station on a specific day?
How much did it rain last Wednesday?
How much snow was on the ground on a recent date?
Where do these data come from?
Daily weather records come from automated and human-facilitated observation stations in the Global Historical Climatology Network-Daily database. Data from each station are reviewed regularly for quality and consistency: the data have been checked for obvious inaccuracies, but they have not been adjusted to account for the influences of historical changes in instrumentation or observing practices.
What can I do with these data?
Find daily records of high and low temperature and precipitation for most localities in the United States.
Display different variables to look for patterns and compare them among different dates.
Answer questions such as:
Where did it rain or snow on a specific date?
How does temperature change with latitude?
How much snow was on the ground at a station on a specific date?