
The National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) preliminary analysis for June 2010, posted this morning, shows that average temperatures in the U.S. were the 8th warmest in 116 years of records. Out of 9 climatic regions, 3 were much above normal, 2 were above normal, and 3 were near normal. Only the Pacific Northwest was below normal. It was the second warmest on record for the Southeast, 5th warmest for the South, and the 7th warmest for the Central Region.Three states (North Carolina [tied], Delaware, and New Jersey) had their warmest June on record. It was the second warmest for:
- Maryland
- Virginia
- South Carolina
- Florida
- Louisiana
For the first half of 2010, 4 states (Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Rhode Island) had their warmest January-June. Eight other Northeast and Great Lakes states have had a top-ten first half. Florida had its 7th coolest year to date.
In the second quarter, every state east of the Mississippi and a few to the west were much warmer than normal. Eleven states had a record warm April-June:
- Louisiana
- Maine
- New Hampshire
- Massachusetts
- Delaware
- Rhode Island
- Connecticut [tied]
- New Jersey
- Maryland
- Virginia
- North Carolina
Images (click to enlarge): U.S. June average temperature since 1895, statewide temperature ranks for June 2010 and second quarter 2010 (April-June); from NCDC
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