Fig. 1 GISS Temperature Anomalies |
The heating up of the 'surface' of the planet means that, since the oceans make up about 71% of that surface, the surfaces of the oceans are receiving a record amount of solar radiation at their surfaces (Earth sees hottest-ever March, the 10th record-breaking month in a row, Broken record: March is 10th straight month to be hottest on record, scientists say).
Since there have been ten "record-breaking" months in a row, I thought I would focus on the surface area in combination with the GISS temperature anomalies (Fig. 1).
The World Ocean Database (WOD) contains a dataset which focuses on the surface only (SURF_ALL.gz), so, I blended the two (GISS surface anomaly, WOD surface only measurements) datasets together to see what that would look like.
The graphs are shown in the appendices (Count Info, layer_03, layer_04, layer_05, layer_06, layer_07, layer_08, layer_09, layer_10, layer_11, layer_12, layer_13, layer_14).
The "Count Info" appendix contains a graphic showing the layers and zones of the WOD datasets in latitude, longitude format.
I am currently placing the surface only data into ocean areas format with all of the other depths a la (The Photon Current, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7).
Those were 33 depth situations that were featured in recent posts here on Dredd Blog, so, in essence the picture has changed to 34 depths.
The next post in this series is here, the previous post in this series is here.