NorthBurnabyWeather Posted October 17, 2016 Report Share Posted October 17, 2016 Plymouth State University has surface and upper air analysis charts (e.g. soundings) for the United States, and NOAA has archived analysis products stretching back to 1998 through the SPC. Is there an archive of Environment Canada analysis charts available on the internet? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Black Hole Posted October 18, 2016 Report Share Posted October 18, 2016 While I don't know if there is free environmental Canada archived data, or if it exists if it is also free, the other data sets you mentioned are quite good. What are you trying to do? Quote Winter 23-24: Total Snow (3.2") Total Ice (0.2") Coldest Low: 1F Coldest High: 5F Snow Events: 0.1" Jan 5th, 0.2" Jan 9th, 1.6" Jan 14, 0.2" (ice) Jan 22, 1.3" Feb 12 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NorthBurnabyWeather Posted October 18, 2016 Author Report Share Posted October 18, 2016 While I don't know if there is free environmental Canada archived data, or if it exists if it is also free, the other data sets you mentioned are quite good. What are you trying to do?Oh no, it's just out of morbid curiosity. I'm not disagreeing that the products to which I linked are very good. I just found it curious why NOAA archived its charts, but Environment Canada does not. I don't think differences in population would explain it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IbrChris Posted October 19, 2016 Report Share Posted October 19, 2016 Plymouth State University has surface and upper air analysis charts (e.g. soundings) for the United States, and NOAA has archived analysis products stretching back to 1998 through the SPC. Is there an archive of Environment Canada analysis charts available on the internet?Try University of Wyoming sounding archive. There's no archived maps but you can view the old soundings (back to the 1970s I believe) either text or skew-T format. Quote The Pacific Northwest: Where storms go to die. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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