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    1. Budget-Purple-6519 on

      Texas was split, but didn’t have different outcomes for those halves across any of the images. How strange.

    2. Swimming_Concern7662 on

      Note: I considered December, January and February as winter months

    3. CounterfeitXKCD on

      Iirc that Northern portion of Maine really only has very small towns, nothing that could really be called a „metro area“

    4. Apptubrutae on

      I need the first three maps for a demonstration of how Albuquerque is not as hot as people who aren’t familiar with new mexico think it is

    5. Interesting how most Scandinavian Americans seem to have settled in the coldest region of USA

    6. Yet another extremely common North Dakota W (extreme cold keeps out the killer bugs and stuff)

    7. Great map. I would split New York and Illinois. I am not sure how Warsaw could be warmer than NYC. It is surprising.

    8. Why is Minnesota split? Also, is Duluth the largest metro in North Minnesota?

    9. More-Sound-8255 on

      Do summer. I believe the US Has much hotter summers for the most part

    10. SpaceElements on

      Appreciate you splitting up the UP and the LP in Michigan. I went to college in Houghton. Might as well have been planet Hoth, it never stops snowing 

    11. Just for the record, Longyearbyen is the largest settlement in Svalbard, an Arctic archipelago that is *much* further north than the rest of Norway. It is also a very small town, with just a couple of thousand residents. Strange to see it included in this list when the others are all capital cities….

    12. I’m surprised there’s a difference between Wisconsin and Illinois this way… Milwaukee is practically on the border of Chicago.

    13. Aggravating_War_1836 on

      i wonder how these winter temps compare to canada’s major cities

    14. Important-Path-4988 on

      love how the color gradients really highlight the differences in each state

    15. Fun_Consequence_5503 on

      definitely curious to see how these zones compare for humidity levels too

    16. Some weird comparisons here. Berlin may have a warmer winter than the largest metro area than the largest metro area of many US states, but what about it’s cultural scene or it’s public transport? How do those compare?

    17. This has a lot to do with how you define „colder winter“ which is a little more complicated than people might realize.

      For Stockholm the average daily high temperature in the coldest month is 1C (33.8F). My home of Kansas City it is 3.6C (38.4F).

      At the same time the average daily low in Stockholm is -2.9C (26.8f), while in Kansas City it is -6.9C (19.5F).

      The daily mean – which is an average of both the daily high and low is colder in Kansas City for it’s coldest month of winter than it is in Stockholm. Also both the record low is lower in Kansas City, the mean minimum temperature is lower during winter in Kansas City – but the highs are higher.

      The middle of North America experiences extremes and intemperate weather all year is at a disadvantage since in winter it would be completely normal to be 10C one day and -5C the next falsely giving the impression it doesn’t get cold there – something that is much less common in Europe.

    18. Striking_Chard_7241 on

      sounds like a classic case of reddit threads going off on tangents

    19. Background-Gas4236 on

      love the way you highlighted those specific years, makes it stand out

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