I think we all figured out what TMIN and TMAX were.
That's *precisely* why there is a problem.
The "average or median" daily maxima mean practically
nothing.
Let's take where I live, for example.
I'm looking at an official map. I see temperatures
7.3C, 9.8C, 14C, 14.2C, 14.7C, and 15C. According
Dear Kevin,
You could try the National Weather Service. I can get "International Falls" and
other locations, though Ely is not specifically listed.
h**ps://www.weather.gov/wrh/climate?wfo=dlh
Replace the ** with tt and it should give the right link.
There is a menu.
Select your location,
Selec
Hi, Tim,
I actually did see this chart when I was doing some research, but
rejected it because it was difficult to interpolate the graph for the
three week period I was interested it. I didn't discover until just now
that I could click on the labels on the x-axis to expand the graph.
Unfortunately
Hi Kevin,
https://weatherspark.com/y/11610/Average-Weather-in-Ely-Minnesota-United-States-Year-Round
Just scroll down. I think what you are looking for is the first graph, but
there are about a dozen other graphs on various meteorological metrics.
Another option would be to use la
Well, I looked for this, on both the NWS and WeatherUnderground, but
couldn't find what I was looking for. Didn't check Weather.com, but if
you can find a chart of the average high and low temperatures in Ely,
MN between about the middle of September to the middle of October, I'll
buy you a beer.
Yes. Old John T. must be turning on his skewer...er, in his grave, I mean.
(I gather he was actually more amicable than that, though.)
- pd
> On 13 Sep 2023, at 16:20 , Ben Bolker wrote:
>
> As a side note, I'm curious how often "Tukey test" is misspelled as "Turkey
> test".
>
>
> Googling
I admire the dedication to R and data science, but the Weather Channel might be
a simpler approach. Weather.com. I can search for (city name) and either
weather (current values) or climate. It depends on how far away the trip will
be.
-Original Message-
From: Kevin Zembower
Sent: Wedn
Rui, thanks so much for your clear explanation, solution to my problem,
and additional help with making the graph come out exactly as I was
hoping. I learned a lot from your solution. Thanks, again, for your
help.
-Kevin
On Tue, 2023-09-12 at 23:06 +0100, Rui Barradas wrote:
> Às 21:50 de 12/09/2
Tim, Richard, y'all are reading too much into this. I believe that TMAX
is the high temperature of the day, and TMIN is the low. I'm trying to
compute the average or median high and low temperatures for the data I
have (2011 to present). I'm going on a trip to this area, and want to
know how to pac
+"turkey test +"mean comparison" 84 hits in google scholar.
There is an aphid "Aphis gossypii." Some people have changed this to "Apis
gossypii." "Apis" is a genus for bees, and there is no critter named "Apis
gossypii." However there are 45 papers in google scholar suffering from this
malady.
I am well aware of the physiological implications
of temperature, and that is *why* I view recorded
TMIN and TMAX at a single point with an extremely
jaundiced eye. TMAX at shoulder height has very
little relevance to an insect living in grass, for
example. And if TMAX is sustained for one second
As a side note, I'm curious how often "Tukey test" is misspelled as
"Turkey test".
Googling '"turkey test" mean comparison' gives 36.1K results (vs 14.3M
for '"tukey test" mean comparison" ...
On 2023-09-13 10:02 a.m., Richard O'Keefe wrote:
d <- read.table("data.txt", TRUE)
cor(d[, 3:6
I had the same question.
However, I can partly answer the off-topic question. Min and max can be
important as lower and upper development thresholds. Below the min no growth or
development occur because reaction rates are too slow to enable such. Above
max, temperatures are too hot. Protein func
> d <- read.table("data.txt", TRUE)
> cor(d[, 3:6])
VAR1 VAR2 VAR3 VAR4
VAR11111
VAR21111
VAR31111
VAR41111
VAR1 to VAR4 are, up to linear scaling,
exactly the same variable. Why is that?
On Wed, 13 Sept 2023 at 07:38, Loop Vi
Off-topic, but what is a "mean temperature max"
and what good would it do you to know you if you did?
I've been looking at a lot of weather station data
and for no question I've ever had (except "would the
newspapers get excited about this") was "max" (or min)
the answer. Considering the way that
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