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The Weather Prediction Center (WPC), including its name from 1955–1995, the National Weather Analysis Center, and its name from 1995–2013, the Hydrometeorological Prediction Center (HPC) As a file created by an employee of the NWS (formerly USWB) in the course of their official duties, whether hosted
Alaska also holds the extreme US record low temperatures for every month except September, where Big Piney, Wyoming recorded -15 °F (-26.1 °C) on September 20, 1983, while the coldest temperature recorded in Alaska in September was -13 °F (-25 °C) in Arctic Village on September 30, 1970.
Northern Lights and Big Dipper at Fairbanks, AK during September. Interior Alaska experiences extreme seasonal temperature variability. Winter temperatures in Fairbanks average −12 °F (−24 °C) and summer temperatures average +62 °F (+17 °C). Temperatures there have been recorded as low as −65 °F (−54 °C) in mid-winter, and as high ...
Get the Sitka, AK local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
In May, temperatures are much warmer, averaging 22.7 °F (−5.2 °C). On June 6, the daily mean temperature rises above freezing, and the normal daily mean temperature remains above freezing until September 21. [34] Climate chart for Utqiagvik. July is the year's warmest month, with an average temperature of 41.7 °F (5.4 °C).
The National Weather Service in White Lake says the cool weather is due to a fall-like airmass moving across the region this weekend. First weekend of September brings cool temperatures, cloudy ...
Sitka (Tlingit: Sheetʼká; Russian: Ситка) is a unified city-borough in the southeast portion of the U.S. state of Alaska.It was under Russian rule from 1799 to 1867. The city is situated on the west side of Baranof Island and the south half of Chichagof Island in the Alexander Archipelago of the Pacific Ocean (part of the Alaska Panhandle).
Biorka Island is an island near Sitka, Alaska. [1] The National Weather Service has a radar there. [2] The island is also a popular spot to watch sealions.Thus, a 2005 proposal by the State of Alaska to give a parcel of 438 acres (177 ha) on the island to the University of Alaska stirred up a controversy.