Editing 1916: Temperature Preferences

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==Explanation==
 
==Explanation==
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{{incomplete|Edited by an Extremophobe. Fill in the table using data from [http://weatherbase.com weatherbase.com] (Randall's source). Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}}
 
This is a chart of major (and not-so-major) populated areas showing seasonal temperature patterns. The chart is a guide to where one might like to live depending on how much summer heat and winter cold they enjoy. There are four focused zones:
 
This is a chart of major (and not-so-major) populated areas showing seasonal temperature patterns. The chart is a guide to where one might like to live depending on how much summer heat and winter cold they enjoy. There are four focused zones:
  
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However, given the great variability of weather patterns across the globe, it's not altogether clear how useful this would actually be to someone looking to choose where to live, since it's not clear exactly what "love/hate hot/cold" would mean.  It's also not clear that the relationship between temperature and discomfort is linear. More likely is that there is a small temperature band where each degree of change causes significantly more discomfort, and beyond which it's just "too hot/cold".
 
However, given the great variability of weather patterns across the globe, it's not altogether clear how useful this would actually be to someone looking to choose where to live, since it's not clear exactly what "love/hate hot/cold" would mean.  It's also not clear that the relationship between temperature and discomfort is linear. More likely is that there is a small temperature band where each degree of change causes significantly more discomfort, and beyond which it's just "too hot/cold".
  
Hottest and coldest month therefore may not be the best measure.  For example, is one or two very cold days better or worse than a month's worth of moderately cold days?  Shown in the table below for each place are the number of days above 32°C (90°F) and the number of days below 0°C (32°F), taken from Weatherbase.com (Randall's source).  For most people a temperature above 32°C is considered hot and a temperature below 0°C is considered cold.  So, for instance, someone who loves heat might want to live in Tehran (with three months above 32°C) rather than Beijing (with only one month) even though the peak month Humidex in Beijing is higher.  Someone who loves cold might want to live in Santa Fe, where it never gets particularly cold (only -8°C) but where it is below freezing almost half of the year (179.8 days on average).  In general though, the places with the most hot or cold days also have the hottest and coldest extremes.
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Hottest and coldest month therefore may not be the best measure.  For example, is one or two very cold days better or worse than a month's worth of moderately cold days?  Shown in the table below for each place are the number of days above 32°C (90°F) and the number of days below 0°C (32°F), taken from Weatherbase.com.  For most people a temperature above 32°C is considered hot and a temperature below 0°C is considered cold.  So, for instance, someone who loves heat might want to live in Tehran (with three months above 32°C) rather than Beijing (with only one month) even though the peak month Humidex in Beijing is higher.  Someone who loves cold might want to live in Santa Fe, where it never gets particularly cold (only -8°C) but where it is below freezing almost half of the year (179.8 days on average).  In general though, the places with the most hot or cold days also have the hottest and coldest extremes.
  
 
Once again, Turpan stands out for its misery, with days above 32°C totaling four months and days below 0°C totaling four months.  In fact, on average there is at least one day every month of the year that the temperature is either above 32°C or below 0°C.  This includes almost every day in June, July and August being hot and every single day in December, January and February being below freezing.
 
Once again, Turpan stands out for its misery, with days above 32°C totaling four months and days below 0°C totaling four months.  In fact, on average there is at least one day every month of the year that the temperature is either above 32°C or below 0°C.  This includes almost every day in June, July and August being hot and every single day in December, January and February being below freezing.
  
Some of the most extreme climates on earth are not shown on this comic, however, perhaps because some of them are uninhabited.  {{w|Eismitte}} (a camp established in the center of Greenland in the 1930s) and {{w|Vostok Station}} (in the center of Antarctica) both see temperatures far colder than McMurdo, although being in the middle of ice caps neither can be inhabited without outside support.  The areas around {{w|Oymyakon}} and {{w|Verkhoyansk}} in eastern Siberia also see temperatures colder than McMurdo and are actual towns, although summer temperatures are much higher.  In both places the summer weather is generally average (Humidex of 22°C to 23°C) but they have seen record highs of 34°C  to 37°C  and record lows of almost -68°C, giving them the greatest temperature swings on earth.  {{w|Bouvet Island}} is a small island in the South Atlantic Ocean, near the latitude where there are no land masses to interrupt storms and currents (south of South America but north of Antarctica).  As a result it has one of the most consistent climates on earth, with a high and low almost always within a few degrees of 0°C all year long – a perpetual state of almost to just freezing, combined with clouds, fog, wind and rain from ocean storms.  {{w|Death Valley}} in California, {{w|Shahdad}} in Iran, and {{w|Murzuk}} in Libya all vie for having the highest temperature in the world, although not the highest Humidex.
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Some of the most extreme climates on earth are not shown on this comic, however, perhaps because some of them are uninhabited.  {{w|Eismitte}} (a camp established in the center of Greenland in the 1930s) and {{w|Vostok Station}} (in the center of Antarctica) both have temperature far colder than McMurdo, although being in the middle of ice caps neither could be inhabited without outside support.  The areas around {{w|Oymyakon}} and {{w|Verhoyansk}} in eastern Siberia also see temperatures colder than McMurdo and are actual towns, although summer temperatures are much higher.  In both places the summer weather is generally average (Humidex of 22°C to 23°C) but they have seen records highs of 34°C  to 37°C  and record lows of almost -68°C, giving them the greatest temperature swings on earth.  {{w|Bouvet Island}} is a small island in the South Atlantic Ocean, near the latitude where there are no land masses to interrupt storms and currents (south of South America but north of Antarctica).  As a result it has one of the most consistent climates on earth, with a high and low almost always within a few degrees of 0°C all year long – a perpetual state of almost to just freezing, combined with clouds, fog, wind and rain from ocean storms.  {{w|Death Valley}} in California, {{w|Shahdad}} in Iran, and {{w|Murzuk}} in Libya all vie for having the highest temperature in the world, although not the highest Humidex.
  
 
The relevant temperature data for these extreme locations, where known, is in the second table for comparison.
 
The relevant temperature data for these extreme locations, where known, is in the second table for comparison.
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| {{w|Shahdad}} || Iran || Asia || Love Heat, Hate Cold || 7.7 || 46.1 ||  ||  ||  ||  || 30° 25′ N || 452 || BWh (hot desert)
 
| {{w|Shahdad}} || Iran || Asia || Love Heat, Hate Cold || 7.7 || 46.1 ||  ||  ||  ||  || 30° 25′ N || 452 || BWh (hot desert)
 
|-
 
|-
| {{w|Verkhoyansk}} || Russia || Asia || Love Cold, Hate Heat || -48.3 || 23.5 || 6 || 23.1 ||  ||  || 67° 33′ N || 142 || Dfd (cold subarctic)
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| {{w|Verhoyansk}} || Russia || Asia || Love Cold, Hate Heat || -48.3 || 23.5 || 6 || 23.1 ||  ||  || ° ′ N || 142 || Dfd (cold subarctic)
 
|-
 
|-
 
| {{w|Vostok Station}} ||  || Antarctica || Love Cold, Hate Heat || -75 || -30 || -37 || -35.4 || 365 || 0 || 78° 27′ S || 3419 || EF (ice cap)
 
| {{w|Vostok Station}} ||  || Antarctica || Love Cold, Hate Heat || -75 || -30 || -37 || -35.4 || 365 || 0 || 78° 27′ S || 3419 || EF (ice cap)

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