The Earth is getting hotter.
The National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) released a new report Monday that showed the planet is on track to have its hottest year on record. The temperatures from January through September of this year tied with the highest period on record, previously reached in 1998.
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The first nine months of 2014 averaged a global temperature of 58.72 degrees Fahrenheit. But in September alone, the planet averaged 60.3 degrees Fahrenheit, marking the hottest September in 135 years.
The Earth experienced record-breaking heat at the end of last year. And the span between October 2013 and September 2014 were documented as the warmest 12-month period on record, ever.
An earlier report published in September by dozens of scientists confirmed what some Republicans dispute: that human-caused climate change is influencing weather patterns around the world. Heat waves in Australia, Korea, Japan, China and Europe, for example, “overwhelmingly showed that human-caused climate change is having an influence,” wrote the authors of that study. The findings indicated that human-caused climate change “greatly increased” the risk for the extreme heat waves assessed in the report, the scientists wrote last month.
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