I would like the temperature, rainfall, etc. day by day for either
Cape May, NJ or Atlantic City, NJ for the month of May 1901. You were
very helpful earlier in getting me this info for April 1901 (see
below), but that link is no longer active, and I can't seem to get the
info elsewhere. Thanks
jfclemons-ga,
You can access the day by day termperature and rainfall records for
Atlantic City for May 1901 at the document at this link:
http://www1.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/orders/A3567A8F-7047-9CD7-698E-3EEF7A2F1444.PDF
Please save this to your local computer, as the link is not permanent
(which is why the link in the earlier question is no longer valid).
If you have any problem at all accessing the document, just let me
know, and we'll figure out a work-around.
Sorry for the delay in responding, but to be honest, I hard a very
hard time re-creating what I did to actually get the April 1901 data
in the first place.
For the record, daily historical records of the sort I supplied here,
can be ordered from NOAA by heading to:
http://www7.ncdc.noaa.gov/SerialPublications/index.jsp
and selecting "Climatological Data". By stepping through the
selection process, you can order historical reports for just a few
dollars each.
Note that the May 1901 report is listed as "1901-5".
Hope that does the trick, but if you need anything else, just let me know.
pafalafa-ga
search strategy -- explored numerous bookmarked links for weather,
along with rooting through my brain, until finding the above links for
ordering historical reports. Chron.commons | Chron.com - Houston Chronicle:: Page Prints 2005-Present | Historic Page Prints 1901-2004 | Chronicle in In late September the weather is ideal, warm days, cool nights, and plenty of sunshine. Cape May, New Jersey reminds me of the porcelain villages that are when Atlantic City developed as the place to go on the Jersey shore. http://www.chron.com/commons/persona.html?newspaperUserId=geraldlarson&plckController=PersonaBlog&plckScript=personaScript&plckElementId=personaDest&plckPersonaPage=BlogViewMonth&plckBlogId=geraldlarson&plckMonthId=2HOME | Places and Organizations of Interest:: The Cape May/Lewes Ferry connects the historic City of Lewes, Delaware and the Victorian City of Cape May, New Jersey. You will also enjoy seeing the Department's 1901 horse cart, The Kalmar Nyckel made four documented round-trip crossings of the Atlantic, more than any other "settlers' ship" of the era. http://www.ci.lewes.de.us/index.cfm?fuseaction=welcome.placesofinterestHOME |
Thanks very much to pafalafa for (re-)doing the research. I
appreciate your going back and getting this for me. I did save the
earlier April 1901 data via PDF file, so I still have it. Ditto now
with May 1901. Thanks
I haven't been able to find the original link either. I presume that
pafalafa will be able to find the link as he did initially and provide
a full citation and link for you to use. (Of course, I can't speak
for pafalafa -- for all I know, he's not available at the moment or
otherwise might be unable to answer the question.)
Heres my question?
Why would someone get bored with doing IT for 10 years?
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