Jedes Jahr der globalen Temperaturen seit 1950, dargestellt als Klimahelix

    Jede Schleife repräsentiert ein Jahr monatlicher globaler Temperaturanomalien im Vergleich zur Basislinie 1961–1990.

    Die Monate laufen im Uhrzeigersinn um den Kreis herum. Der Abstand vom Zentrum zeigt an, wie weit die Temperaturen vom historischen Durchschnitt abwichen.

    Im Laufe der Zeit steigt die Helix an und dehnt sich nach außen aus, da die globalen Temperaturen zunehmend über historischen Normen liegen.

    Blauer Feststoff = kältestes Jahr
    Blau gestrichelt = Basislinie 1961–1990

    Weißer Vollton = wärmstes Jahr
    Weiß gestrichelt = Mittelwert 2016–2026

    Rot = einzelne Jahre
    Orange = 2026 bisher

    Die gestrichelten Ringe markieren die Erwärmungsschwellen des Pariser Abkommens (+1,5 °C und +2 °C).

    Daten: Berkeley Earth / NOAA

    Interaktive Version + Animation:
    https://4billionyearson.org/climate/helix

    Von 4billionyearson

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    35 Kommentare

    1. 4billionyearson on

      The interactive version includes:

      * rotation/speed controls
      * rainfall + ENSO overlays
      * animated yearly buildup
      * display for any Continent, Country, US State, or UK Region (Temp, sunshine, rainfall, frost).

      Built with climate anomaly data from Berkeley Earth and NOAA.

      [https://4billionyearson.org/climate/helix](https://4billionyearson.org/climate/helix)

    2. Thin-Concentrate9118 on

      the helix makes the acceleration hit different than a line chart. you can literally see recent years pushing out past the rings where older years used to sit. really effective choice of format

    3. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a cyclone graph before, it’s very understandable way of presenting this information.

    4. Turning and turning in the widening gyre

      The falcon cannot hear the falconer;

      Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;

      Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,

      The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere

      The ceremony of innocence is drowned;

      The best lack all conviction, while the worst

      Are full of passionate intensity.

    5. I don’t know how you can look at this data and conclude that climate change isn’t real.

      Honestly we need to start getting more „direct“ with climate action because I’m oh so very tired of people putting money before humanity surviving the next few hundred years.

    6. Sooo thats fucking terrifying thank you… (no but for real, thanks, its amazing)

    7. Now THAT is beautiful data. What an intuitive, emotionally compelling tool. AND it’s honest with the underlying data and trends.

      Perfect job. Thanks for the interactive tool, too. This should be a poster in every middle school and high school science class in my country. 

    8. What a great way to visualize the data. I think r/tornado would appreciate your work too.

    9. WardBeullens on

      It doesn’t seem to make sense that each year is a loop. The data should be one spiraling curve, as the end of one year should be the beginning of the next year.

    10. pr0crasturbatin on

      See, we’re not on a downward spiral, we’re on an upward spiral! This is a success story!

    11. Strangedreamest on

      Thanks to that orange trash bag that’s rotting in the White House, and data centers popping left right and center, we’re well on course for +5°C by the end of the century

    12. PresidentZeus on

      Cool visualisation. For some feedback, matching the colours of the 1,5 and 2 degree targets to the colours of the data would be interesting. You could have the colour gradient on the floor, where those paris circles are.

    13. AggravatingMuffin132 on

      Love this. Very well done. I wish i could put something like this together.

      I would be so interested in this data going back as far as possible.

    14. localhoststream on

      Looks like its accelerating when you take a line from 1950 below to now…

    15. A_Happier_Reddit on

      Very cool! (And scary). Just a little note. Red/orange is terribly hard to see for mostly all us colorblind. Red/yellow would be a better pairing to use if you want to stick to warm colors.

    16. Throwaway1098590 on

      This infographic is amazing!!!

      I wish Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders, and others would use this infographic

      (As long as the data is correct)

    17. vincenzodelavegas on

      Not an easy data to show into one single graph… but you did a very good job! Still took me a while to figure it all out but complex problems and complex insights sometimes do require complex UI/UX, that’s just the reality of it.

    18. runtothesun on

      Brother this is such a fantastic visual to convey a very important topic

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