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Insane temperature anomalies, even at the same time, over Greenland (30°C, i.e. 5°C in 850 hPa) and Europe (16°C, i.e. 20°C in 850 hPa, remaining that high for a few days). In Germany, maybe even in Jutland, this could result in a late October summer day (max temperature >25°C).
Periodic reminder that parts of the Arctic still are very warm. Largest anomaly (14°C over avg 1979-2000) now over Greenland, leading to positive maximum temperatures for the next days along the entire west coast from #CapeFarewell to #Qaanaaq. Data: @UMaine's #ClimateReanalyzer.
Most of the Arctic will be 10-15°C warmer than the 1979-2000 in the #CFSR reanalysis for the next ten days. This means maximum temperatures well above freezing, even though the Sun is very low above the horizon (no polar night yet except close to the pole).
2m temperature deviation from the average 1979-2000 for the next five days according to the #GFS model (from #Climatereanalyzer). Large parts of the inner Arctic are more than 10°C, #Chukchi and #Beaufort Seas mostly ice free and even 20°C warmer than they should at this time.