Additionally, the year to date (January through November) and the three-month season (September through November) placed second and third hottest, respectively, according to scientists at NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information.
Exceptional warmth also caused Arctic sea ice coverage to melt to its second-lowest November coverage on record. Here’s more from NOAA’s latest monthly global climate report:
Climate by the numbers: November 2020
The average global land and ocean surface temperature for November 2020 was 1.75 degrees F (0.97 of a degree C) above the 20th-century average. This is the second-highest November temperature on record — slightly below that for November 2015 — and exceeds the now third-highest average temperature observed for November 2019.
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