NOAK49 PAFG 020014 PNSAFG AKZ222-021215- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FAIRBANKS AK 414 PM AKDT SAT SEP 1 2012 ...AUGUST 2012 WEATHER SUMMARY FOR FAIRBANKS ALASKA... ...NEAR NORMAL TEMPERATURES AND BELOW NORMAL PRECIPITATION... TEMPERATURES IN AUGUST WERE NEAR NORMAL. THE AVERAGE DAILY HIGH TEMPERATURE WAS 66.5 DEGREES...WHILE THE AVERAGE LOW TEMPERATURE WAS 46 DEGREES. THE MONTHLY MEAN TEMPERATURE OF 56.3 DEGREES WAS JUST 2 TENTHS OF ONE DEGREE ABOVE NORMAL. THE HIGH TEMPERATURE FOR THE MONTH WAS 78 DEGREES OBSERVED ON THE 14TH...WHILE THE LOW TEMPERATURE WAS 37 DEGREES OBSERVED ON THE 22ND. SOME OF THE TYPICALLY COLD LOW LYING AREAS DROPPED BELOW FREEZING ON THE MORNING OF THE 22ND...INCLUDING LOWS OF 25 DEGREES AT ESTER 5NE...26 AT GOLDSTREAM CREEK AND 29 AT BOTH EIELSON AFB AND CHENA HOT SPRINGS. URBAN AREAS AS WELL AS MOST HIGH ELEVATION SITES DID NOT HAVE A FREEZE DURING AUGUST. THE MONTH STARTED WITH A DECIDED LACK OF RAIN WITH ONLY 26 HUNDREDTHS OF AN INCH AT THE FAIRBANKS INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT THROUGH THE 23RD. ONLY 13 HUNDREDTHS OF AN INCH OF RAIN FELL DURING THE ENTIRE TANANA VALLEY FAIR FROM THE 3RD THROUGH THE 12TH...AND ONLY 3 HUNDREDTHS OF AN INCH OF RAIN WAS OBSERVED AT NORTH POLE THROUGH THE 23RD. THE LACK OF SIGNIFICANT RAIN ALLOWED THE DRY CREEK FIRE 11 MILES SOUTHWEST OF EIELSON AFB BASE TO SPRING BACK TO LIFE. THE FIRE WAS INITIALLY STARTED ON JUNE 23RD BY LIGHTNING BUT REMAINED INACTIVE DUE TO A COOL JULY. THE FIRE QUICKLY GREW DURING THE 3RD WEEK OF AUGUST TO JUST OVER 40 THOUSAND ACRES BY AUGUST 24TH...AND ENDED UP ACCOUNTING FOR NEARLY ONE SIXTH OF THE 249,021 ACRES THAT BURNED STATEWIDE THIS SUMMER. SMOKE FROM THE FIRE MOVED INTO THE FAIRBANKS AREA ON THE 18TH AND WAS NOTICEABLE AT TIMES DURING THE NEXT SEVERAL DAYS...AND ALSO PRODUCED POOR AIR QUALITY AT TIMES. WET WEATHER FINALLY MADE AN APPEARANCE IN THE FAIRBANKS AREA ON THE 25TH AND 26TH WITH A TWO DAY TOTAL OF 1.07 INCHES OF RAIN. THE 82 HUNDREDTHS OF AN INCH OF RAIN THAT WAS OBSERVED ON THE 26TH WAS THE WETTEST DAY IN FAIRBANKS IN OVER 2 YEARS SINCE JULY 21, 2010. THE MONTH ENDED WITH A TOTAL OF 1.43 INCHES...WHICH WAS 43 HUNDREDTHS OF AN INCH BELOW NORMAL. NO THUNDERSTORMS WERE OBSERVED AT THE AIRPORT THIS PAST AUGUST. FOR THE METEOROLOGICAL SUMMER...WHICH IS THE 3-MONTH PERIOD OF JUNE THROUGH AUGUST...THE AVERAGE TEMPERATURE WAS 59.5 DEGREES WHICH WAS 6 TENTHS OF A DEGREE BELOW NORMAL. IT WAS THE COOLEST SUMMER SINCE 2008. A TOTAL OF 4.56 INCHES OF RAIN WAS OBSERVED THIS PAST SUMMER...WHICH WAS 83 HUNDREDTHS OF AN INCH BELOW NORMAL. IT WAS THE 9TH DRIEST SUMMER IN THE PAST 30 YEARS. THERE WERE ONLY 5 DAYS THIS SUMMER WITH A HIGH TEMPERATURE OF 80 DEGREES OR WARMER...WELL BELOW THE NORMAL OF 11. MANY RURAL LOW LYING AREAS HAD ONE OR MORE MORNINGS WITH TEMPERATURES DOWN TO FREEZING EVERY MONTH THIS SUMMER. LOOKING AHEAD TO SEPTEMBER...TEMPERATURES COOL SIGNIFICANTLY. THE AVERAGE HIGH DROPS FROM 62 DEGREES ON THE FIRST TO 46 DEGREES ON THE 30TH. SINCE 1905...SEPTEMBER TEMPERATURES HAVE RANGED FROM A HIGH OF 84 IN 1957 TO A LOW OF 3 IN 1992. AVERAGE RAINFALL IS 1.1 INCHES WITH AN AVERAGE SNOWFALL OF 1.8 INCHES. SNOW IS RARE DURING THE FIRST 10 DAYS OF THE MONTH AT LOW ELEVATIONS...BUT THE CHANCE OF SNOW INCREASES DURING THE SECOND HALF OF THE MONTH. 1992 IS STILL REMEMBERED BY LONG TIME RESIDENTS WHEN WINTER ARRIVED EARLY WITH SIGNIFICANT SNOWFALL AROUND MID MONTH...AND A TEN DAY TOTAL OF OVER 2 FEET OF SNOW. MEASURABLE SNOWFALL HAS BEEN OBSERVED ON 19 OUT OF THE PAST 30 YEARS DURING THE MONTH OF SEPTEMBER...OR 63 PERCENT OF THE TIME. POSSIBLE SUNSHINE DECREASES FROM 14 HOURS AND 33 MINUTES ON THE FIRST TO 11 HOURS AND 21 MINUTES BY THE 30TH. THE FORECAST FOR SEPTEMBER FROM THE CLIMATE PREDICTION CENTER CALLS FOR AN INCREASED CHANCE OF ABOVE NORMAL PRECIPITATION. THERE ARE NO STRONG CLIMATE SIGNALS THAT INDICATE AN INCREASED CHANCE OF EITHER ABOVE OR BELOW NORMAL TEMPERATURES.
Objective Comments and Analysis - All Science, No Politics
Primary Author Richard James
2010-2013 Author Rick Thoman
Monday, September 3, 2012
Fairbanks August Summary
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