Ianswfl wrote:Jr0d wrote:LarryWx wrote:Amazing and absolutely a big concern for that area. But I do wonder if assuming it is verified as accurate whether it will be counted as the new world record because of how shallow the water is. I wonder what is the depth required to be considered for the world record. The existing record is 99.7F set in Kuwait Bay "recorded by the offshore station KISR01 located in the middle of the Bay" since 2016 per this:
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33096400/ So, that buoy doesn't appear to be in overly shallow water. OTOH, the Manatee Bay buoy is in shallow water as shown by yesterday's range of 10.1F from the 4AM low of 91.0 to the 101.1 high at 6PM. In terms of world record hot SST, I don't feel like it is apples to apples when comparing very shallow waters to deeper waters. Perhaps a more appropriate measure would be to only consider the mean for the day, which was 96F yesterday.
Any thoughts from anyone on this? By the way, I expect a significantly cooler SST high there today due to showers in the area.
Many buoys in the area have alarmingly high SSTs as well. Again shallow water, but when you look to other areas like Marathon and Key West, ssts are in the 90s.
Not good. Just had a severe storm roll through Stock Island, waiting on data from Boca Chica. Regardless many moored boats got loose, a lot of dragged anchors.
Not a good sign. Even if this rain cools the water to the upper 80s, the latent heat here is off scale.
My fear is a small core system rapidly strengthening before any evacuations can be ordered. Hopefully it wont happen...
Water temps at the beaches here in SWFL been running a bit cooler than previous years. Venice hovering around 86-88 most of the time. The last 3 summers it was hitting 91 or 92 a lot. Gotta wonder if it's something with the sensors at the pier after Ian or something if they moved them cause usually it's warmer in the summer and this summer has been warmer. Unless it's due to the wind direction, I dunno.
After yesterday's Manatee Bay buoy SST high of an amazing 101.1 at 6PM, today thanks to showers at times and shallow water was 7.1 cooler at 93.0 exactly 24 hours later. This illustrates my concern about whether yesterday's 101.1 SST should be made the new official world's highest SST.
More on the validity of yesterday's amazing 101.1F on Manatee Bay:
"That could be a new world record, besting an unofficial 99.7 degree temperature once reported in Kuwait. But meteorologists say the Florida gauge's location in dark water near land could make that difficult to determine.
Was Monday’s 101.1 degree temperature in Manatee Bay a valid record measurement?
That depends on the surrounding circumstances, said Jeff Masters, a meteorologist for Yale Climate Connections. The reading would need to be verified, and no one keeps official sea surface temperature records, Masters said.
The Manatee Bay gauge is very close to land, south of Biscayne Bay, and measures the water temperature at a depth of 5 feet.
Since the Manatee Bay buoy is near land, the water temperature could have been heated up by floating plants and other debris, he said. Without photos documenting clear water there Monday, 'it will be difficult to verify the 101.1 degree record as valid.'
Given the gauge's location near land and the Kuwait measurement in open water, Masters said the two really shouldn't be compared."https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nat ... 463489007/ Over the last couple of days, the SST has moved over 3F within just one hour several times. That's not normal. Between 5 and 6AM yesterday (before sunrise), it rose nearly 3F from 91.6 to 94.5! How can that be? The sun doesn't even rise til 6:45AM!