NOAA TM GLERL-88 Great Lakes states monthly average temperature data - beginning of record to 1990 --2025

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NOAA through the collaboration between OAR/GLERL, National Ocean Service (NOS) and academia has developed and implemented the Great Lakes Operational Forecast System (GLOFS), a 3-d numerical lake forecast modeling system to provide critical forecast guidance on water levels, water currents and water temperature to
-The GLOFS is a NOAA-automated model-based prediction system aimed at providing improved predictions of water levels, water currents and water temperatures in the five Great Lakes (Erie, Michigan-Huron,Superior,and Ontario) for the commercial, recreation, and emergency response communities.
The Great Lakes System comprises Lakes Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie, and Ontario, plus hundreds of rivers and estuaries across the northern United States and southern Canada. The water in the system flows eastward from Lake Superior, six hundred feet above sea level, through the lakes into the St.
Lakewide temperatures are generally in the mid- to upper-40s, as of December 5, 2024. Lake Superior is currently averaging 44.2 degrees Fahrenheit, the normal average is 40.5 degrees for the beginning of December.
The Global Forecast System (GFS) is a National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP) weather forecast model that generates data for dozens of atmospheric and land-soil variables, including temperatures, winds, precipitation, soil moisture, and atmospheric ozone concentration.
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Operational Forecast System Description An OFS consists of the automated integration of observing system data streams, hydrodynamic model predictions, product dissemination and continuous quality-control monitoring.

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