We draw particular cautious attention to our reliance on the MERRA-2 model-based reconstructions for a number of important data series. While having the tremendous advantages of temporal and spatial completeness, these reconstructions: 1 are based on computer models that may have model-based errors, 2 are coarsely sampled on a 50 km grid and are therefore unable to reconstruct the local variations of many microclimates, and 3 have particular difficulty with the weather in some coastal areas, especially small islands.
We further caution that our travel scores are only as good as the data that underpin them, that weather conditions at any given location and time are unpredictable and variable, and that the definition of the scores reflects a particular set of preferences that may not agree with those of any particular reader. You're permitted to use this graph as long as you provide prominent attribution with a link back close to the use of the graph.
Spring Summer Fall Winter. Charlotte Temperature History Link. History: The daily range of reported temperatures gray bars and hour highs red ticks and lows blue ticks , placed over the daily average high faint red line and low faint blue line temperature, with 25th to 75th and 10th to 90th percentile bands. Hourly Temperature in in Charlotte Link. The hourly reported temperature, color coded into bands. The shaded overlays indicate night and civil twilight. Compare Charlotte to another city:.
Cloud Cover in in Charlotte Link. The hourly reported cloud coverage, categorized by the percentage of the sky covered by clouds. Daily Precipitation in in Charlotte Link. The daily measured quantity of liquid or liquid-equivalent precipitation. Snow Depth in in Charlotte Link. Observed Weather in in Charlotte Link. The hourly observed weather, color coded by category in order of severity. If multiple reports are present, the most severe code is shown. Hours of Daylight and Twilight in in Charlotte Link.
The number of hours during which the Sun is visible black line. From bottom most yellow to top most gray , the color bands indicate: full daylight, twilight civil, nautical, and astronomical , and full night. The solar day over the course of the year From bottom to top, the black lines are the previous solar midnight, sunrise, solar noon, sunset, and the next solar midnight. For southeastern and central North Carolina, it was Hurricane Florence that brought a great deal of that rain, as the tropical system dropped anywhere from one to two feet of rain over several days as it slowly made its way through the Carolinas in September.
Of course, this led to the catastrophic flooding we saw from the central and southern coastal plain to the Sandhills. A few weeks later, Hurricane Michael moved across the state, this time it was the western parts of North Carolina that saw more rain and more flooding concerns for the mountains and foothills. The early season winter system in December added to our statewide precipitation totals as it produced a mix of snow and ice for some and just more a lot more rain for others.
And on the final day of , most reporting stations reported a little more rain in their rain gauges. A fitting end to the this wet weather year of The overall pattern continues to point toward an increase chance of precipitation as we start with the three-month outlook indicating above average precipitation into March. So it looks like is going to take up where left off and you might need to keep that umbrella close as we move into the brand new year.
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